52 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :- Perhaps the audience that would find this film the most useful won't see it., 25 February 2005
Author:
gidget_ca from Canada
It's a shame that by garnering a restricted rating, perhaps the
audience that would find this film the most useful won't likely see it.
Imaginary Heroes follows the life of a teenager after his brothers'
suicide. Not, of course, the most original story in the world, however
it does spend a great deal of time humanizing their parents, the
'imaginary heroes' that failed in their sons' eyes.
For teenagers, who tend to put responsibility for their failures on
their parents but yet refuse to accept any real responsibility on their
own, the movie sends a powerful message, that in the end we all have
our own troubles we need to deal with, and that we all make our own
paths.
But, unlike other movies that tend to urge youth independence, this one
resolves the issues between parents and child, and they become a
stronger unit for it. That the eldest child committed suicide is
regrettable, but not overlooked later in the film, and the
responsibility by all parties for the tragedy is thoroughly explained.
Although the subject matter has been covered before, it hasn't been
covered quite this way -- the film pulls very little punches. Now, why
this earned it an R rating is confusing -- you're unlikely to get
across to a teenager in this era without being realistic, but yet
providing realism restricts that very audience.
Were my junior high-school class have been shown this film, two
suicides may have been prevented. In this case, the censors seem to
have exercised extremely poor judgment.
8/10
34 out of 42 people found the following comment useful :- Heavy film about a dysfunctional family, well worth seeing., 19 February 2005
Author:
kmwilson36 from United States
Saw this film when it was an entry in Santa Fe Film Festival. Heavy
film! Depiction of a completely dysfunctional family taken to another
level of the extreme, might have left me depressed to the extreme, had
it not been for very funny sight gags and dialogue along the way which
lightened the film's overall tone. The relatively "uplifting" ending
gave hope for those affected by the initial tragedy. Still, I did not
walk out of the theatre ready to go to a fun party. The film stayed
with me for several days.
Brought back memories of "Ordinary People", but with humor mixed in
with the tragedy. I thought the acting was excellent, especially by
Sigourney Weaver and Emile Hirsh. How each character dealt with the
tragedy was at times sad, self-defeating, but also at times hilarious.
Clever dialogue, and situations.
32 out of 40 people found the following comment useful :- Excellent, smart, funny, scary, 3 April 2005
Author:
plkldf from Baltimore MD USA
This film is chock-full of little surprises, many of them funny. The
fact that it's written and directed by a 24-year old blows my mind.
Some of the scenes where the high school kids are using ecstasy made me
very uncomfortable because I have a kid that age and I could picture
her using it. As parent of a teen, I found the depictions of the
parent-child interactions to be dead-on accurate.
I enjoyed the film's many little jokes, and I enjoyed the fact that not
everything made perfect sense and not all the issues were resolved by
the end. To paraphrase Mark Twain, truth is stranger than fiction,
because fiction is required to stick to that which is possible, while
truth is not.
This is a film which plays with the viewer, allowing us believe that
people are what other people think they are, only to allow us later to
realize that the folks we assumed were right were completely ignorant
of the real situation. One of the film's strongest scenes, a scene
about which we feel very relieved and sympathetic about what the
character is doing, turns out to be based on a completely wrong
assumption, and the character, while admirable, is totally wrong. It's
very subtly done, I think. Very realistic.
I liked the score a lot -- I thought it really aided the film, really
helped set the mood -- the film has a couple of screwball moments, and
the background music helps establish that.
The valedictorian speech is a hoot and a half -- got a big laugh! The
movie is really in my head right now -- saw it this morning. Will try
to see it again, time allowing. Tens are hard to come by, but a solid
nine in my book.
22 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :- Well written - Well acted - Great story, 14 February 2005
Author:
gepin045 from Winnipeg,Canada
This film is a powerful commentary on family life in North America
today. The story is so well constructed, it almost feels like its
happening across the street, right now! If you are connected with your
family and community in any way, this film will grab you and transport
you to the Travis' home and not allow you to leave until the credits
are done.
Our imaginary heroes, through a myriad of innocent circumstances, often
unwittingly, lead us down a path of sorrow, confusion and isolation.
The Travis family, after a terrible tragedy, invite each of us; father,
mother, brother and sister, into their respective lives to share their
experience in a dynamic set of circumstances that just doesn't quit. We
see all of the above and eventually the joy, in powerful performances
by the major players and the rest of the cast, making this film a
movie-goers absolute treasure.
In a film so well done as this, it is usually difficult to to find
something special, but Sigourney Weaver's portrayal of Sandy Travis was
outstanding. I would be surprised if others didn't recognize it as
such.
Clearly a 10. Well done!
29 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :- Outstanding!, 1 October 2004
Author:
uclajt from Los Angeles, CA
Wow. When I went to this film at the Toronto film festival I had no
idea what I was in for. This movie takes you on an emotional
roller-coaster in the best sense of the term. Sigourney Weaver was
better than I've seen from her in years; Emile Hirsch was great and
Jeff Daniels broke my heart. I can see how this won't be every person's
cup of tea, as at times it deals with some pretty harsh things that can
happen to a family. Don't get me wrong -- it's really funny too -- at
my screening the audience burst out in applause after laughing over and
over again. I just think if you're open to examining your own life,
Imaginary Heroes will sincerely touch you. I can't wait until it comes
out in theaters.
32 out of 52 people found the following comment useful :- "Ordinary People" Meets "American Beauty" by way of "The Ice Storm", 20 December 2004
Author:
george.schmidt (george.schmidt@hbo.com) from fairview, nj
IMAGINARY HEROES (2004) **1/2 Sigourney Weaver, Emile Hirsch, Jeff
Daniels, Michelle Williams, Kip Pardue, Deirdre O'Connell, Ryan
Donowho, Suzanne Santo, Jay Paulson, Luke Robertson. (Dir : Dan Harris)
"Ordinary People" Meets "American Beauty" by way of "The Ice Storm"
Just what is it about the suburbs that have been portrayed as an
American cousin to Norway's fjords in which nothing but despair,
suicidal tendencies and infidelities run rampant at the corner of Angst
and Anomie?
In the latest endeavor by Harris, a screenwriter who shared credit for
the first "X-Men" film and several other comic book hero adaptations
down the pike, makes his directorial debut questioning just that: Why
does a family fall completely apart when a serious crisis occurs?
Well in the case of the Travis family it is the shocking,
out-of-nowhere sudden horrific suicide by their eldest son Matt
(Pardue), a star athlete with nothing but a bright, shiny future ahead
who inexplicably offs himself sending his relatives into a whirlwind of
emotions (and lack of to boot). Sharp tongued yet surprisingly loving
mother Sandy (Weaver, the best thing about the film) resorts to smoking
marijuana when she's not dodging the next door neighbor (O'Connell) ;
ineffectual father Ben (Daniels in the trickiest performance making
an asshole likable) whose undying love for his dead son sends him into
the deepest depths of depression and lashes out at his remaining brood;
college age sister Penny (Williams) who attempts to anchor her grief in
brief return visits only to party with blinders on and namely middle
son Tim (Hirsch) who just is trying to move on with the whole affair
and not dwelling on it as best he can yet still getting himself into a
series of situations leading to a fall he may not be able to recover
from.
The black comic pitch Harris attempts to filter into the various stages
of grief are a mixed bag but often leave their marks of ridiculous
moments of suburban oddness with a few brief elements of genuine loss
and heartbreak. Leavened with a good dose of humor the film
none-the-less is a listless addition to the quasi -genre of suburban
angst films.
53 out of 97 people found the following comment useful :- Simply the best film of the year., 23 December 2004
Author:
minorityinfluence from United States
Imaginary Heroes is clearly the best film of the year. It was a
complete and utter joy to watch. I was riveted. The whole audience up
at the Sunset Five was riveted, when the film ended no one moved,
spoke, nothing. I think this film is a perfect example of the of the
power that drama has. Especially in so much as it sets an example of
the quality of drama/ work of this younger generation.
There were moments in your film, many, like at least seven, where I was
struck by such a great amount of beauty, emotional beauty, that I
actually couldn't breathe for a while. And for a catharsis junkie like
me, that's about the best censorial experience I could ask for. It is
the result of powerful, masterful storytelling and direction. Like
heavyweight stuff, like Burtolucci and those guys.
Each element of the film fit tightly together. There were no missteps
at all. The cast was amazing. I have been a huge fan of Emile's and
Ryan's for a long time, and I thought they have never been better. I
was/am/will be continuously stunned by this film. And I promise I will
drag every person I know to see it. It should be seen. It should win
awards.
10 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- mature work from a very young script-writer and director, 4 October 2005
Author:
dromasca from Herzlya, Israel
It is hard to judge 'Imaginary Heroes' without referring to the fact
that director and script writer Dan Harris is only 25. You can hardly
believe seeing this film, which is not only a mature piece of work,
professional and deep, but also with some of the defects of routine
specific to older directors.
The setting is the American suburb, too familiar from 'American Beauty'
or 'Desperate Housewives'. As in 'American Beauty'the film turns around
a suicide, but here it happens at the beginning of the movie, and we
are left watching a mid-class family coping with the death of the
gifted sportsman brother and son. Emile Hirsch plays the younger
brother, Sigourney Weaver is the mother, both are excellent trying to
cope with the loss, to find the reason and motivation to survive.
Harris drives his actors with a sure hand, and the first two sections
of the film (there are four in total, as the seasons of the year) build
a wonderful tension, with credible dilemmas and real questions. It is
the second part of the film that disappoints slightly, it looks too
tired and conventional, and I suspect that the producers may have
interfered in the work of the young script-writer and director, trying
to bring him closer to the Hollywood convention. That's how this film
fails to be a somber version of 'American Beauty', with a different
focus. I am sure however that we will hear a lot about Dan Harris in
the coming years.
13 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :- Rock n' Roll Fantasy, 14 April 2005
Author:
urnotdb from United States
The Kinks warned about media heroes. Outside the movies, most heroes
are also "Ordinary People." Society demands some role playing, but what
happens when that extends to the parent-child relationship? Do some
parents try to improve themselves through their children rather than
vice versa? How do you provide a role-model but not a role? A brilliant
swimmer who hates to swim; a brilliant musician who won't play.
Offbeat, funny (despite depiction of "serious" problems), very good
multi-dimensional acting by everyone. Lots of plot twists complement
the emotional tension. Celluloid heroes never feel any pain. I don't
recall ever being disappointed in a Sigourney Weaver film (I even liked
"The Village"!).
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- a bit derivative but effective overall, 27 June 2005
Author:
Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
It occurred to me while watching "Imaginary Heroes" that any
screenwriter attempting to make a drama about family relationships
should seriously consider killing off a kid or two in the opening reel
as a way of getting his characters to open up and reveal themselves.
There must be something to this storyline, for it seems as if every
other family drama that comes down the pike uses this device in one
form or another ("Paradise" and "Moonlight Mile" are just two of the
more recent examples that spring immediately to mind, although one
could reach back to a golden oldie like "Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?" to make the point as well). It's not that the death of a child
is an illegitimate subject for serious films to explore. Far from it.
It's just that, like any topic, it can be so overused that it becomes
just another movie cliché, a convenient bit of narrative shorthand to
get the ball rolling and to give the characters something to grapple
with for the remainder of the time we get to spend with them.
The latest such work is "Imaginary Heroes," a film that borrows heavily
from what is one of the earliest and, perhaps, best known examples of
the "family coping with the death of a child" genre, the Academy Award
winning "Ordinary People." Like the characters in that earlier film,
the Travises seem, on the surface, to be the ideal suburban family,
until, one fateful day, their oldest son, Matt, who is the "golden boy"
athlete and, thus, the apple of his father's eye, kills himself with no
explanation (one minor difference is that the son in "Ordinary People"
dies as a result of an accident, not a suicide). It is Matt's younger
brother, Tim, who winds up finding the body, and who assumes the role
of protagonist in the film. Each of the remaining family members copes
with the tragedy in his or her own way. Matt, who has always lived in
the shadow of his older brother, becomes more and more estranged from
the father who has virtually ignored him all his life and begins to
turn to drugs for surcease. Ben, the father, becomes swallowed up in
feelings of remorse and guilt, turning away from both his job and his
family. His wife, Sandy, is the most complex character in the film, a
free-spirited child of the '60's who feels oddly adrift in the role of
mother and wife as she endures a basically loveless marriage in sterile
suburbia. She spends most of her time after the tragedy trying to
reconnect with her pot-smoking past.
As written and directed by Dan Harris, "Imaginary Heroes" emerges as a
wildly uneven film. For every scene that feels real and authentic,
there is another that comes across as arbitrary and inauthentic. One
sometimes has the sense that Harris would like to cram every possible
life situation he can think of into his screenplay, an admirable goal,
perhaps, but one that makes the film unnecessarily melodramatic in the
process. Instead of identifying with the characters and being caught up
in their plight, we often find ourselves thinking, "Oh, come now what
next?" For teen suicide is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to
the hot-button topics covered in this film; the screenplay also touches
on drug and alcohol abuse, physical abuse, sexual identity conflict,
life-threatening illness, even inadvertent gay incest. It is this
"everything but the kitchen sink" mentality in the writing that robs
the movie of much of the credibility it needs to really make us care.
That is not to say that "Imaginary Heroes" is a bad or unrewarding
film. Much of what it has to say about familial relationships and
values in the 21st Century is insightful, original, pointed and
profound. Prime credit for its success goes to the actors, Emile
Hirsch, Sigourney Weaver and Jeff Daniels, who deliver incisive,
sensitive performances in their respective roles. It is they who
triumph over the narrative excesses to stimulate our brains and touch
our hearts. Moreover, Harris, in his direction, achieves an effectively
melancholic tone throughout, but one that is frequently augmented by
some badly-needed flashes of daring dark comedy.
"Imaginary Heroes" may appear unfocused and derivative at times, but
its fine performances and subtle mood shifts make it a film worth
watching.
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52 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :-

Perhaps the audience that would find this film the most useful won't see it., 25 February 2005
Author: gidget_ca from Canada
It's a shame that by garnering a restricted rating, perhaps the audience that would find this film the most useful won't likely see it.
Imaginary Heroes follows the life of a teenager after his brothers' suicide. Not, of course, the most original story in the world, however it does spend a great deal of time humanizing their parents, the 'imaginary heroes' that failed in their sons' eyes.
For teenagers, who tend to put responsibility for their failures on their parents but yet refuse to accept any real responsibility on their own, the movie sends a powerful message, that in the end we all have our own troubles we need to deal with, and that we all make our own paths.
But, unlike other movies that tend to urge youth independence, this one resolves the issues between parents and child, and they become a stronger unit for it. That the eldest child committed suicide is regrettable, but not overlooked later in the film, and the responsibility by all parties for the tragedy is thoroughly explained.
Although the subject matter has been covered before, it hasn't been covered quite this way -- the film pulls very little punches. Now, why this earned it an R rating is confusing -- you're unlikely to get across to a teenager in this era without being realistic, but yet providing realism restricts that very audience.
Were my junior high-school class have been shown this film, two suicides may have been prevented. In this case, the censors seem to have exercised extremely poor judgment.
8/10
34 out of 42 people found the following comment useful :-

Heavy film about a dysfunctional family, well worth seeing., 19 February 2005
Author: kmwilson36 from United States
Saw this film when it was an entry in Santa Fe Film Festival. Heavy film! Depiction of a completely dysfunctional family taken to another level of the extreme, might have left me depressed to the extreme, had it not been for very funny sight gags and dialogue along the way which lightened the film's overall tone. The relatively "uplifting" ending gave hope for those affected by the initial tragedy. Still, I did not walk out of the theatre ready to go to a fun party. The film stayed with me for several days.
Brought back memories of "Ordinary People", but with humor mixed in with the tragedy. I thought the acting was excellent, especially by Sigourney Weaver and Emile Hirsh. How each character dealt with the tragedy was at times sad, self-defeating, but also at times hilarious. Clever dialogue, and situations.
32 out of 40 people found the following comment useful :-

Excellent, smart, funny, scary, 3 April 2005
Author: plkldf from Baltimore MD USA
This film is chock-full of little surprises, many of them funny. The fact that it's written and directed by a 24-year old blows my mind. Some of the scenes where the high school kids are using ecstasy made me very uncomfortable because I have a kid that age and I could picture her using it. As parent of a teen, I found the depictions of the parent-child interactions to be dead-on accurate.
I enjoyed the film's many little jokes, and I enjoyed the fact that not everything made perfect sense and not all the issues were resolved by the end. To paraphrase Mark Twain, truth is stranger than fiction, because fiction is required to stick to that which is possible, while truth is not.
This is a film which plays with the viewer, allowing us believe that people are what other people think they are, only to allow us later to realize that the folks we assumed were right were completely ignorant of the real situation. One of the film's strongest scenes, a scene about which we feel very relieved and sympathetic about what the character is doing, turns out to be based on a completely wrong assumption, and the character, while admirable, is totally wrong. It's very subtly done, I think. Very realistic.
I liked the score a lot -- I thought it really aided the film, really helped set the mood -- the film has a couple of screwball moments, and the background music helps establish that.
The valedictorian speech is a hoot and a half -- got a big laugh! The movie is really in my head right now -- saw it this morning. Will try to see it again, time allowing. Tens are hard to come by, but a solid nine in my book.
22 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :-

Well written - Well acted - Great story, 14 February 2005
Author: gepin045 from Winnipeg,Canada
This film is a powerful commentary on family life in North America today. The story is so well constructed, it almost feels like its happening across the street, right now! If you are connected with your family and community in any way, this film will grab you and transport you to the Travis' home and not allow you to leave until the credits are done.
Our imaginary heroes, through a myriad of innocent circumstances, often unwittingly, lead us down a path of sorrow, confusion and isolation. The Travis family, after a terrible tragedy, invite each of us; father, mother, brother and sister, into their respective lives to share their experience in a dynamic set of circumstances that just doesn't quit. We see all of the above and eventually the joy, in powerful performances by the major players and the rest of the cast, making this film a movie-goers absolute treasure.
In a film so well done as this, it is usually difficult to to find something special, but Sigourney Weaver's portrayal of Sandy Travis was outstanding. I would be surprised if others didn't recognize it as such.
Clearly a 10. Well done!
29 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :-

Outstanding!, 1 October 2004
Author: uclajt from Los Angeles, CA
Wow. When I went to this film at the Toronto film festival I had no idea what I was in for. This movie takes you on an emotional roller-coaster in the best sense of the term. Sigourney Weaver was better than I've seen from her in years; Emile Hirsch was great and Jeff Daniels broke my heart. I can see how this won't be every person's cup of tea, as at times it deals with some pretty harsh things that can happen to a family. Don't get me wrong -- it's really funny too -- at my screening the audience burst out in applause after laughing over and over again. I just think if you're open to examining your own life, Imaginary Heroes will sincerely touch you. I can't wait until it comes out in theaters.
32 out of 52 people found the following comment useful :-

"Ordinary People" Meets "American Beauty" by way of "The Ice Storm", 20 December 2004
Author: george.schmidt (george.schmidt@hbo.com) from fairview, nj
IMAGINARY HEROES (2004) **1/2 Sigourney Weaver, Emile Hirsch, Jeff Daniels, Michelle Williams, Kip Pardue, Deirdre O'Connell, Ryan Donowho, Suzanne Santo, Jay Paulson, Luke Robertson. (Dir : Dan Harris)
"Ordinary People" Meets "American Beauty" by way of "The Ice Storm"
Just what is it about the suburbs that have been portrayed as an American cousin to Norway's fjords in which nothing but despair, suicidal tendencies and infidelities run rampant at the corner of Angst and Anomie?
In the latest endeavor by Harris, a screenwriter who shared credit for the first "X-Men" film and several other comic book hero adaptations down the pike, makes his directorial debut questioning just that: Why does a family fall completely apart when a serious crisis occurs?
Well in the case of the Travis family it is the shocking, out-of-nowhere sudden horrific suicide by their eldest son Matt (Pardue), a star athlete with nothing but a bright, shiny future ahead who inexplicably offs himself sending his relatives into a whirlwind of emotions (and lack of to boot). Sharp tongued yet surprisingly loving mother Sandy (Weaver, the best thing about the film) resorts to smoking marijuana when she's not dodging the next door neighbor (O'Connell) ; ineffectual father Ben (Daniels in the trickiest performance making an asshole likable) whose undying love for his dead son sends him into the deepest depths of depression and lashes out at his remaining brood; college age sister Penny (Williams) who attempts to anchor her grief in brief return visits only to party with blinders on and namely middle son Tim (Hirsch) who just is trying to move on with the whole affair and not dwelling on it as best he can yet still getting himself into a series of situations leading to a fall he may not be able to recover from.
The black comic pitch Harris attempts to filter into the various stages of grief are a mixed bag but often leave their marks of ridiculous moments of suburban oddness with a few brief elements of genuine loss and heartbreak. Leavened with a good dose of humor the film none-the-less is a listless addition to the quasi -genre of suburban angst films.
53 out of 97 people found the following comment useful :-

Simply the best film of the year., 23 December 2004
Author: minorityinfluence from United States
Imaginary Heroes is clearly the best film of the year. It was a complete and utter joy to watch. I was riveted. The whole audience up at the Sunset Five was riveted, when the film ended no one moved, spoke, nothing. I think this film is a perfect example of the of the power that drama has. Especially in so much as it sets an example of the quality of drama/ work of this younger generation.
There were moments in your film, many, like at least seven, where I was struck by such a great amount of beauty, emotional beauty, that I actually couldn't breathe for a while. And for a catharsis junkie like me, that's about the best censorial experience I could ask for. It is the result of powerful, masterful storytelling and direction. Like heavyweight stuff, like Burtolucci and those guys.
Each element of the film fit tightly together. There were no missteps at all. The cast was amazing. I have been a huge fan of Emile's and Ryan's for a long time, and I thought they have never been better. I was/am/will be continuously stunned by this film. And I promise I will drag every person I know to see it. It should be seen. It should win awards.
10 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

mature work from a very young script-writer and director, 4 October 2005
Author: dromasca from Herzlya, Israel
It is hard to judge 'Imaginary Heroes' without referring to the fact that director and script writer Dan Harris is only 25. You can hardly believe seeing this film, which is not only a mature piece of work, professional and deep, but also with some of the defects of routine specific to older directors.
The setting is the American suburb, too familiar from 'American Beauty' or 'Desperate Housewives'. As in 'American Beauty'the film turns around a suicide, but here it happens at the beginning of the movie, and we are left watching a mid-class family coping with the death of the gifted sportsman brother and son. Emile Hirsch plays the younger brother, Sigourney Weaver is the mother, both are excellent trying to cope with the loss, to find the reason and motivation to survive. Harris drives his actors with a sure hand, and the first two sections of the film (there are four in total, as the seasons of the year) build a wonderful tension, with credible dilemmas and real questions. It is the second part of the film that disappoints slightly, it looks too tired and conventional, and I suspect that the producers may have interfered in the work of the young script-writer and director, trying to bring him closer to the Hollywood convention. That's how this film fails to be a somber version of 'American Beauty', with a different focus. I am sure however that we will hear a lot about Dan Harris in the coming years.
13 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :-

Rock n' Roll Fantasy, 14 April 2005
Author: urnotdb from United States
The Kinks warned about media heroes. Outside the movies, most heroes are also "Ordinary People." Society demands some role playing, but what happens when that extends to the parent-child relationship? Do some parents try to improve themselves through their children rather than vice versa? How do you provide a role-model but not a role? A brilliant swimmer who hates to swim; a brilliant musician who won't play. Offbeat, funny (despite depiction of "serious" problems), very good multi-dimensional acting by everyone. Lots of plot twists complement the emotional tension. Celluloid heroes never feel any pain. I don't recall ever being disappointed in a Sigourney Weaver film (I even liked "The Village"!).
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

a bit derivative but effective overall, 27 June 2005
Author: Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
It occurred to me while watching "Imaginary Heroes" that any screenwriter attempting to make a drama about family relationships should seriously consider killing off a kid or two in the opening reel as a way of getting his characters to open up and reveal themselves. There must be something to this storyline, for it seems as if every other family drama that comes down the pike uses this device in one form or another ("Paradise" and "Moonlight Mile" are just two of the more recent examples that spring immediately to mind, although one could reach back to a golden oldie like "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" to make the point as well). It's not that the death of a child is an illegitimate subject for serious films to explore. Far from it. It's just that, like any topic, it can be so overused that it becomes just another movie cliché, a convenient bit of narrative shorthand to get the ball rolling and to give the characters something to grapple with for the remainder of the time we get to spend with them.
The latest such work is "Imaginary Heroes," a film that borrows heavily from what is one of the earliest and, perhaps, best known examples of the "family coping with the death of a child" genre, the Academy Award winning "Ordinary People." Like the characters in that earlier film, the Travises seem, on the surface, to be the ideal suburban family, until, one fateful day, their oldest son, Matt, who is the "golden boy" athlete and, thus, the apple of his father's eye, kills himself with no explanation (one minor difference is that the son in "Ordinary People" dies as a result of an accident, not a suicide). It is Matt's younger brother, Tim, who winds up finding the body, and who assumes the role of protagonist in the film. Each of the remaining family members copes with the tragedy in his or her own way. Matt, who has always lived in the shadow of his older brother, becomes more and more estranged from the father who has virtually ignored him all his life and begins to turn to drugs for surcease. Ben, the father, becomes swallowed up in feelings of remorse and guilt, turning away from both his job and his family. His wife, Sandy, is the most complex character in the film, a free-spirited child of the '60's who feels oddly adrift in the role of mother and wife as she endures a basically loveless marriage in sterile suburbia. She spends most of her time after the tragedy trying to reconnect with her pot-smoking past.
As written and directed by Dan Harris, "Imaginary Heroes" emerges as a wildly uneven film. For every scene that feels real and authentic, there is another that comes across as arbitrary and inauthentic. One sometimes has the sense that Harris would like to cram every possible life situation he can think of into his screenplay, an admirable goal, perhaps, but one that makes the film unnecessarily melodramatic in the process. Instead of identifying with the characters and being caught up in their plight, we often find ourselves thinking, "Oh, come now what next?" For teen suicide is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the hot-button topics covered in this film; the screenplay also touches on drug and alcohol abuse, physical abuse, sexual identity conflict, life-threatening illness, even inadvertent gay incest. It is this "everything but the kitchen sink" mentality in the writing that robs the movie of much of the credibility it needs to really make us care.
That is not to say that "Imaginary Heroes" is a bad or unrewarding film. Much of what it has to say about familial relationships and values in the 21st Century is insightful, original, pointed and profound. Prime credit for its success goes to the actors, Emile Hirsch, Sigourney Weaver and Jeff Daniels, who deliver incisive, sensitive performances in their respective roles. It is they who triumph over the narrative excesses to stimulate our brains and touch our hearts. Moreover, Harris, in his direction, achieves an effectively melancholic tone throughout, but one that is frequently augmented by some badly-needed flashes of daring dark comedy.
"Imaginary Heroes" may appear unfocused and derivative at times, but its fine performances and subtle mood shifts make it a film worth watching.
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