Oct 17, 2014
We live in a world with more communication tools than ever before, yet we seem to be losing the ability to talk straight with each other. Between texting, TV, Tivo, Roku, and role-playing games alone, we rarely enjoy each other’s simple company and the lost art of conversation. We can embrace more of the world, yet we hear about loneliness more than ever.
Jason Reitman’s new movie “Men Women & Children” tackles these issues head-on, with the incisive and powerful dramedy serving as a wake-up call to take back our relationships and our families from the dangerous ledges we place them upon in the Internet age. It depicts a roundelay of relationships in Austin, Texas, a red state town that Hollywood normally dismisses as flyover country rather than paying genuine attention to the lives found within.
The plot will sound extreme at first, and many people will find at least some of its content pretty offensive in the first half. However, Reitman (who directed the superb movies “Juno” and “Up in the Air”) and his team are forcing us to take a long, hard look at where society is going and whether we have enough decency left to stop it – and making audiences feel (most of the sex and nudity and pornography involved is implied or discussed, not shown or barely shown) how bad we have become in this case is a powerful part of the point. And without giving away exactly who, what or how, note that the characters wind up making the right decisions in the end.
The movie follows several families in quiet crisis, focusing foremost on the bland marriage of Don (Adam Sandler) and Helen Truby (Rosemarie Dewitt), who have a teenage son who spends a lot of his time secretly watching porn and masturbating in his room. It’s soon revealed that Don does the same thing, and even sneaks into his son’s room to use his porn, because it is even more perverse than his own. The men are described by the narrator (Emma Thompson) as being so perverted by their pornography habits that they cannot become aroused without such images in their minds, and have thus been warped by the pornography (which again, is largely unseen, but discussed or implied, in the movie).