The Battle Outside Is Raging-Maggie
Smith’s My Old Lady
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
My Old Lady, starring Kevin Kline,
Maggie Smith, Kristin Scott-Thomas, 2014
Oh sure every once in a while
Hollywood or somebody puts out a quirky little film like the one under review, My Old Lady (an unfortunate term for the title since my
frame of reference for the term, and the central male character’s as well stems
from the 1960s when the term was used as a term of endearment, I guess, for
your wife or girlfriend who most certainly was not an old lady since we did not
recognize anybody over thirty and we would not have, in my circle anyway,
called dear old mother such a term). Quirky? Well yes because it addresses in a
semi-comical way what we now all know is a truism. That the battle, the
inter-generational battle, we 50 and 60 somethings fought against our parents (and
all authority) in the 1960s and early 1970s (that dear old mother over thirty
who we did not recognize in our universe) never did really end, at least in
some households.
Here is what I mean. Mathias (played
by Kevin Kline), a broke, broken down refugee from the ‘60s, is heir to a
luxurious apartment in Paris (there are other luxurious apartments in the world
although not in Paris but that setting makes this film work a little better)
left by his now deceased father whom, well, let’s say they didn’t get along.
And Mathias has the three divorces and the shrink bills to prove it, prove he
was unloved by his father. So our man spends his last Euros to get to Paris and
sell the unit and maybe get his twenty-seventh “fresh start” in life (if those
ex-wives don’t find out about his current good fortune). Problem, problem
number one is that he cannot sell the damn thing while one Mathilde is alive
and well (she a British national who has lived in Paris since Django Reinhart’s
time played, played naturally, by that age old institution Maggie Smith who has
lost a step or seven since her Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie days).
See Mathias’ father and Mathilde
were lovers (while both we married to others, Mathias’ mother committing
suicide over the matter) and he set her up in the apartment giving her, under
an old French custom, a life tenancy in the place. So our boy has to not only
look at the actuarial tables but figure out a way to get the “old lady” out and
big dough into his hands. Now. Oh yeah, did I say that the “old lady” had a
daughter, Chloe, a fetching daughter (played by Kristen Scott Thomas of The English Patient fame) who also wants
to stay since she grew up in the place and has no place else to go. Chloe
naturally takes an instant hate to the reckless and feckless Mathias.
But you know what is going to
happen, know as sure as you know the father was not a good guy (although
Mathilde’s take on him is obviously different even if he left her high and dry
after his wife killed herself). Hollywood or something will trot out the old tried
and true boy meets girl formula and they will get together. Not only that but
dear sweet Mathilde will get to finish her days in her old place. And maybe, just
maybe that battle Mathias had with his father will be “resolved” when somebody
tries to buy the place when he is Maggie’s age. Yes, quirky, quirky indeed.
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