Joy is the story of the title character, who rose to become founder and matriarch of a powerful family business dynasty.
Director:
David O. RussellWriters:
David O. Russell (screenplay), Annie Mumolo (story)Stars:
Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Bradley CooperStoryline
JOY is the wild true story of Joy Mangano and her Italian-American
family across four generations centered on the girl who becomes the
woman who founds a business dynasty by inventing the Miracle Mop and
becomes a matriarch in her own right. Betrayal, treachery, the loss of
innocence and the scars of love, pave the road in this intense emotional
and human comedy about becoming a true boss of family and enterprise
facing a world of unforgiving commerce. Allies become adversaries and
adversaries become allies, both inside and outside the family, as Joy's
inner life and fierce imagination carry her through the storm she faces.
Jennifer Lawrence stars, with Robert De Niro, Bradley Cooper, Edgar
Ramirez, Isabella Rossellini, Diane Ladd, and Virginia Madsen. Like
David O. Russell's previous films, Joy defies genre to tell a story of
family, loyalty, and love. Written by
TV
Movie Reviews
Joy proves that both Jennifer Lawrence and David O. Russell have lost their touch.
Joy tells the story of a
strong willed woman or, as our narrator concludes, the film is about
all strong women everywhere. We are introduced to Joy (Jennifer
Lawrence) as she plays outside her father Rudy's (Robert De Niro) auto
shop store. We get glimpses of dysfunction within her family and then it
spits us out somewhere between one surrealist scene in which Joy dreams
about soap opera stars and her family harassing her and then it goes
into her family life and why she is in the situation she's in. This
patterns continues throughout the whole film, allowing us to never feel
an ounce of concern over Joy and her miraculous mop. Why care about
someone who can literally figure a way out of every unsavory situation
she is in and into every beneficial situation she's in. There's no
suspense, no wonder, no enchantment. This film feels like a biopic but
ends up coming across as a half assed attempt at one as it blends the
corniness of soap operas into the seriousness of David O. Russell as a
filmmaker. In the end, it never works. Not even once as a film. Instead,
the film subjects us to situations that Joy is in that we care nothing
about. Whether it is mending things with her mother and father or
fending off those looking for a free ride, you know before it even
starts that Joy is going to get out of it. This makes for a painfully
boring film. The performances are good here, as with any David O.
Russell film (except this year's Accidental Love). Jennifer Lawrence is
being Jennifer Lawrence. There's no acting required here for her. She
can sleep walk through a strong willed woman role and she does so here.
Despite being the lead role, Lawrence is the weakest link here. She was
the weakest part of American Hustle and she is the weakest part here and
it is a testament to Russell continuously casting her in roles that
should be played by actresses ten years her senior. American Hustle it
was pretty clear she was out of her element, there's no difference with
Joy. She wallows in a mature aurora to her but it never really rings
true no matter how hard Lawrence tries (and trust me, she does give her
all here). It ends up being a good performance in a woefully miscast
film. The supporting actors are plentiful, some even stealing whole
scenes. One highlight here is Robert De Niro. Russell has proved he can
get the absolute best out of De Niro. This is refreshing to see
especially because we all thought he gave up with some of his recent
film choices but De Niro can surprise us with touching performances in
between playing cookie cutter gangsters and cops. Bradley Cooper is good
here and will make you want more out of him but this is a showcase for
Jennifer Lawrence so let your hopes down easy. Overall, Joy demonstrates
that David O. Russell has a confident handle on his performers but it
also proves that he is merely a carbon copy of Martin Scorsese (or at
least he is trying to be). It is an uneven film that is inspired by
Goodfellas in the way Joy's story is told and unfortunately for this
film, gangsters are much more interesting than housewives making a fancy
mop...no matter how kick ass that mop may be in real life, the film
feels like a rip off in more ways than one.