Paul Giamatti and Alex Shaffer in Win Win. |
Win Win, the latest film from writer-director Thomas McCarthy continues in the same pleasing vein of his two previous movies, The Station Agent (2003) and The Visitor (2007). It, too, is concerned with the lives of ordinary people who sometimes do extraordinary things, much like the recluse (Peter Dinklage) in The Station Agent who affects a motley group of people when he moves to their neighbourhood; to the lonely college professor (Richard Jenkins) in The Visitor who changes lives, not least his own, when he befriends a pair of illegal immigrants in New York. Win Win revolves around Mike Flaherty (Paul Giamatti), a lawyer/wrestling coach in New Jersey, who reluctantly takes in Kyle (Alex Shaffer), a young man who has left his Ohio home to be with his grandfather Leo (Burt Young). The only problem is that said relative, suffering from early-onset dementia, is now in a nursing home, which leaves Kyle with few options but to move in with Flaherty and his family. What McCarthy does with this seemingly thin tale is nothing short of miraculous.
Amy Ryan and Alex Shaffer |
I think, however, that Win Win wouldn’t have been half as effective as it is if it didn’t feature Alex Shaffer. As Kyle, this young actor makes an extraordinary film debut. Portraying that rarity on screen, a genuinely sensitive and good kid, he appears monosyllabic, even dull, when we first meet him, but gradually opens up as he interacts more and more with Mike and his family and the grandfather he never knew. It’s a terrific performance, the most convincing portrait of teenage angst and confusion since Claire Danes’s brilliant incarnation of Angela Chase on the short lived TV series My So-Called Life (1994-95). Almost all the kids in the film, in fact, are good, untroubled souls, a reality we rarely see in an age of depicted screwed up teens in everything from 90210 to Pretty Little Liars, but perhaps much more truthful than we generally acknowledge.
The rest of the cast lives up to Shaffer’s acting, though as with Barney’s Version, Giamatti's fine, but he isn’t exactly stretching himself. I was more impressed with Amy Ryan’s riveting performance as Mike’s loyal but tough wife who develops her own, touching bond with Kyle. Bobby Cannavale’s Terry, a lost soul who doesn’t always say the right thing in social situations, brings some welcome humour to the film, particularly when he displaces Vig as Mike’s coaching partner, causing the latter to seethe with impotent jealousy. Burt Young, still best known for the Rocky movies where he played Rocky's brother-in-law, stands out as the crusty Leo, as does Nina Arianda, in her small role as Mike’s quirky secretary, Shelley. The film, which is set in the borough of New Providence, New Jersey, McCarthy’s hometown, soft pedals its depiction of an economically bereft America;. We know things are tough, but McCarthy is more interested in how Mike and his circle of friends and family get by from day to day. Like The Visitor, which assailed America’s newly toughened post 9/11 immigration laws as refracted though the folks most affected by them, but minus that movie’s sometimes contrived plotting, Win Win skillfully balances its small and the large canvases. It’s about the way we live now unveiled through the normal lives and deeds of a small slice of American society. Modest and simple in intent, Win Win will stay with you.
– Shlomo Schwartzberg is a film critic, teacher and arts journalist based in Toronto . He will be teaching a course on science fiction in the movies and on television beginning in late April at Ryerson University 's LIFE Institute.
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