Hope Springs
Meryl Streep Actor , Tommy Lee Jones Actor , Steve Carell Actor , Jean Smart Actor , Ben Rappaport Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Adult Situations,Not For Children,Sexual Situations
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Hope Springs
Theatrical Release Date: 2012 08 08 (USA)
UPC: 043396408043
Studio: Sony Pictures
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Adult Situations, Not For Children, Sexual Situations]
Summary: An aging couple strive to conquer their sexual hang-ups and save their 30-year marriage from going stale by visiting a renowned couple's therapist in this comedy from director David Frankel (The Devil Wears Prada, Marley & Me). After three decades of marriage, Kay (Meryl Streep) and Arnold (Tommy Lee Jones) still love each other deeply. But somewhere along the way, their passion for one another seems to have perished. Upon learning about a relationship therapist (Steve Carell) in Great Hope Springs whose methods have yielded incredible results, Kay pleads with Arnold to sign up for a weeklong session. Little does the committed couple realize that overcoming years of sexual repression will prove to be quite an exhausting challenge. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Comedy Drama
Awards: Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical – Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Features:
Gag reel
Alternate takes gallery
Inside the perfect movie marriage: Meryl Streep & Tommy Lee Jones featurette
Commentary with director David Frankel
Hope Springs
Format: DVD
Release Date: 12/04/2012
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 2.40:1
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 100 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French
Subtitles: English,French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Hope Springs
1. Scene 1 [7:08]
2. Scene 2 [6:19]
3. Scene 3 [4:18]
4. Scene 4 [6:15]
5. Scene 5 [7:16]
6. Scene 6 [5:36]
7. Scene 7 [7:29]
8. Scene 8 [8:23]
9. Scene 9 [8:02]
10. Scene 10 [6:33]
11. Scene 11 [4:36]
12. Scene 12 [3:19]
13. Scene 13 [5:50]
14. Scene 14 [5:57]
15. Scene 15 [6:06]
16. Scene 16 [6:32]
Perry Seibert
Director David Frankel has carved out a niche delivering safe, middlebrow, vaguely poignant films that cater to an undernourished segment of the moviegoing population: people over 50. His second collaboration with Meryl Streep, Hope Springs, is exactly what you expect in both good and bad ways. Streep stars as Kay, a housewife whose marriage to taciturn, grumpy tax specialist Arnold (Tommy Lee Jones) has grown stale and passionless after several decades -- they don't even sleep in the same bed anymore. In an attempt to salvage their relationship, Kay books a weeklong intensive-therapy session with Dr. Feld (Steve Carell), an expert counselor who practices in the small New England burg that gives the film its title. Feld gets the twosome to open up, practice intimacy exercises, and share their feelings with each other, but Arnold finds it hard to overcome decades of resentment, disappointment, and inertia. It shouldn't come as a surprise that this debut feature script from Vanessa Taylor plays very much like an episode of the short-lived HBO couples-in-therapy series Tell Me You Love Me: Taylor wrote two of the ten installments in the series' brief history. The only difference is that this story aims directly at AARP members. There's rich territory here for a rueful comedy or a heartbreaking drama, and it's hard to conceive of a better cast for this story. Streep and Jones are spectacular in the therapy sessions -- you can see the truth fight up through their multiple layers of fear and pain. Watch what Streep does with her hands when Kay is fearful of hearing something painful, and savor how Jones slowly sheds Arnold's gruff exterior without abandoning the character's essential nature. Carell offers flawless support as the patient, caring counselor. There aren't many comedic actors who are so comfortable letting other performers have all the big moments -- most would mug for the camera in order to get a little attention. Carell, on the other hand, has no problem letting others take center stage, and that's why he fits so well in this acting m?nage ? trois: Feld is such an expert at his work that he understands the sessions are not about him at all. Carell makes sure the attention stays on the stars. The actors are so good they overcome the merely functional direction. Frankel repeatedly makes sure we see exactly how close Kay and Arnold are sitting next to each other, and while that establishes the tone at the beginning of each encounter, he uses the shot so often that it becomes a heavy-handed symbol. There's too much nuance in their relationship to reduce it so often to something so simple, yet simple is the perfect adjective to describe Frankel and Taylor's approach to the material. That can have its charms -- this is certainly as straightforward a movie as you're likely to find -- but what marriage is straightforward or simple? Real relationships, even the great ones, are messy. By refusing to delve deeper, the characters come off as two-dimensional symbols whom we can relate to only because we might have experienced the same dissatisfactions, rather than three-dimensional people whose neuroses and struggles make them singular and recognizable. Thanks to the actors, the whole movie goes down smoothly. Streep and Jones are compulsively watchable -- we hang on every little movement and line reading because there's little to admire but their craft. They were up for something much more challenging and memorable than what's onscreen, but Frankel and Taylor, like so many stale marriages, get sucked into a tired routine. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Todd Black
Producer
David Frankel
Director
Steve Tisch
Executive Producer
Jessie Nelson
Executive Producer
Jason Blumenthal
Executive Producer
Theodore Shapiro
Composer (Music Score)
Guymon Casady
Producer
Vanessa Taylor
Screenwriter
Nathan Kahane
Executive Producer
Meryl Streep
Actor
Tommy Lee Jones
Actor
Steve Carell
Actor
Jean Smart
Actor
Ben Rappaport
Actor
Marin Ireland
Actor
Patch Darragh
Actor
Brett Rice
Actor
Becky Ann Baker
Actor
Elisabeth Shue
Actor
Charles Techman
Actor
Daniel Flaherty
Actor
Damian Young
Actor
Mimi Rogers
Actor
Ann Harada
Actor
Jack Haley
Actor
Susan Misner
Actor
Rony Clanton
Actor
John Srednicki
Actor
Madeline Ruskin
Actor
Lee Cunningham
Actor
Paul Letersky
Actor
Rogina Bedell-O'Brien
Actor
Stephen Lee Davis
Actor
Country: USA

