As the title character, Ryan Gosling is a strange but likeable young man who manages to keep down a job but keeps mostly to himself. He only leaves the garage where he lives when his older brother Gus (Paul Schneider) and loving sister-in-law Karin (Emily Mortimer) drag him to their house next door for dinner. Lars doesn't take .. Read more
| Starring | Ryan Gosling, Emily Mortimer, Paul Schneider, Kelli Garner |
|---|---|
| Director | Craig Gillespie |
| Genres | Comedy, Drama |
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As the title character, Ryan Gosling is a strange but likeable young man who manages to keep down a job but keeps mostly to himself. He only leaves the garage where he lives when his older brother Gus (Paul Schneider) and loving sister-in-law Karin (Emily Mortimer) drag him to their house next door for dinner. Lars doesn't take well to questioning, so the disturbing level of his isolation is never openly discussed. It's only when he announces he has a girlfriend in the form of an anatomically correct doll he purchased via the internet that everyone must admit his precarious mental state. No one quite knows how to help Lars, so they play along, careful not to do anything that might push him or Bianca (his plastic fiancée) over the edge. The results are touching efforts on the part of all those who love him to help Lars through what his psychologist (Patricia Clarkson) assures them may be only a stage. Kelli Garner shines as Margo, the real, live girl who Lars seems incapable of seeing. Despite being ignored, Margo hangs in there, hopeful Lars will come around to sanity and to her.
Craig Gillespie's LARS AND THE REAL GIRL is a sweet love story and a film which deals with mental illness in surprisingly subtle ways. With a formula that could easily have manipulated for cheap laughs, the film achieves quirky humour in parts but mostly touching observations about the nature of delusions themselves. The film's talented cast gathers around Lars, a sensitive character who the film respects and who Gosling (THE NOTEBOOK, HALF NELSON) brings fully to life.
| Starring | Ryan Gosling, Emily Mortimer, Paul Schneider, Kelli Garner, Patricia Clarkson, Nancy Beatty |
|---|---|
| Director | Craig Gillespie |
| Studio | MGM ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 46 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy, Drama |
| Language | English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 18 Aug 2008 Production year: 2007 |
| Format | DVD |
It's not unusual for children to have imaginary friends. Parents usually take an indulgent - if uneasy - view of such a fantasy, confident that it will soon pass. The Orphanage and... read more »
Watched this bored on a plane yesterday purely by chance after thinking 'this will either be horrendous or brilliant, so i'll give it 5 mins and see what happens...I gave it 5 and it held my attention, but I was still unsure...so gave it another 10...and was utterly hooked! Brimming with originality and great humour (I was laughing out loud in a plane seat!!) but also provoking emotions of sadness, pity, reflection, love and humanity. Quiet aside from the excellent storyline, you have in this film some of the best acting I have seen in ages..Ryan Gosling is jaw-droppingly excellent, and he's not the only shining star.
Watch it, watch it, watch it...
Many of the reviews here call this a very, very funny movie. While it is certainly sweet (probably the most appropriate adjective I can think of), and there is a subtle element of humour throughout which puts a coy smile on your face, I have to stop short of calling it 'funny'. The film starts out fairly slowly; it took me 30 min or so for an interest to take hold. (On a related note, I agree with the person who said Tom Charity missed the plot in his review.)
More intriguing than the humour, though, is the journey our hero Lars takes in this film. We watch his character develop complexity and nuances which takes us, and his small town, with him. Many people criticize the community's acceptance of Lars' 'girlfriend' unrealistic, but whether realistic or not it didn't bother me or detract from the story. On the contrary, I didn't have any trouble accepting a small, closeknit town coming together on this matter - there was plenty of disbelief to keep it real.
Lars and the Real Girl didn't have me laughing out loud, but I found myself slowly pulled in and enjoyed Lars' evolution.
It's not unusual for children to have imaginary friends. Parents usually take an indulgent - if uneasy - view of such a fantasy, confident that it will soon pass. The Orphanage and The Spiderwick Chronicles both play on just such an understanding, but in each case the imaginary has more teeth than you would expect. When it's an adult labouring under this delusion it's more disturbing - unless you're Jimmy Stewart and your pal is a six foot white rabbit answering to the name of "Harvey". Lars (R Read more
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