Dan in Real Life (2007)

Description[from Freebase]

Dan in Real Life is a 2007 American comedy-drama film directed by Peter Hedges, starring Steve Carell and Juliette Binoche. Dan Burns (Steve Carell) is a newspaper advice columnist, a widower, and a controlling father to his children Jane (Alison Pill), Cara (Brittany Robertson) and, Lilly (Marlene Lawston) in the New Jersey suburbs. His column is in contention to be syndicated nationally. The family takes a trip to the Rhode Island home of his parents (Dianne Wiest and John Mahoney) to visit his family—including his New York City-based brother, Mitch (Dane Cook), a personal trainer—for an annual family get together. Cara does not want to go, as she does not want to leave her boyfriend Marty (Felipe Dieppa) whom she claims to have fallen in love with in just three days. But Dan insists that it is not possible to fall in love in three days and makes her go. The morning after his arrival, Dan's mother encourages him to go into town for a bit to give his daughters some space. Dan visits a bookstore and a customer named Marie (Juliette Binoche) mistakes him for an employee. Dan and Marie have an obvious connection and continue to talk over breakfast.

Review

It has been a while since I've seen an actor single-handedly elevate merely fair material with a transcendental performance.

Steve Carell is the Dan of Real Life, and his touching turn as an unassuming newspaper columnist and father of three girls exists on a level above the film's perfectly acceptable cast -- no small feat considering that Dianne Wiest, John Mahoney, and Juliette Binoche contribute to the ensemble.

So far, the comedian has displayed a knack for sharp sarcasm (Evan Almighty) and incredible obliviousness (NBC's The Office). He adds earnestness, warmth, and pathos to his repertoire as he carries this contrived yet charming romantic comedy regarding multiple generations of parents and their children.

Director Peter Hedges' goal is to establish a complicated love triangle, though it requires a rather large leap of faith on our part. While assisting his siblings in winterizing their parents' cabin, Dan meets beautiful stranger Marie (Binoche) in a neighborhood bookstore. They playfully flirt, agree to share a muffin, and spend the afternoon conversing. Yet she fails to mention either why she is in the area or that she has a boyfriend... who happens to be Dan's brother, Mitch (Dane Cook).

Such developments normally leave 'coincidence' in the rear view as we speed on toward 'impossible,' but Dan rebounds nicely. Hedges demonstrated in his small but sweet debut Pieces of April that he can maneuver through dysfunctional family humor. He has a tendency in Dan to repeat his jokes -- the same cop pulls Dan over repeatedly, and the dryer in his makeshift bedroom clunks along like a bum punch line hitting the pavement.

But the comforting glow of a gathered family warms Dan from within, and the coincidences melt away as Wiest, Mahoney, Binoche, and co-star Emily Blunt bring needed flavor. Sure, Hedges might be making a basic peanut butter-and-jelly sandwich of a feature, but he cuts the crusts off the white bread because he knows that's how we like it.

The DVD includes a gag reel, 20 minutes of deleted scenes, commentary track, and two featurettes (one on the creation of the film's overlooked score).

Life as we know it.

by Sean O'Connell, Filmcritic.com
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