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Reign Over Me (2007)

Director: Mike Binder

Average user rating
1 review

Synopsis

A chance meeting with an old friend changes the life of tragic Charlie Fineman.

Movie review

From Time Out London

Upon noticing the words ‘Adam Sandler’ and ‘9/11’ occupying the same sentence, you’d half expect some sort of coronary arrest to ensue. Yet the tender, meditative opening scenes of ‘Reign Over Me’ neatly dispel any mental imagery that may have formed involving a gurning Sandler spraying silly string at a group of irate Muslims. As Paul Thomas Anderson did with ‘Punch-Drunk Love’, director Mike Binder has twigged on to the fact that if you root Sandler’s genially churlish moron act into a more sober foundation, a vulnerable, believable and even lovable character can begin to emerge.

Here he plays Charlie Fineman, a one-time dentist and dead ringer for ’60s-era Dylan (Todd Haynes will be kicking himself) who, having lost his wife and daughters during the 2001 attacks, now lives alone with the support of government compensation and has taken to meandering the streets on a motorised scooter cocooned in a bleating soundtrack of ’70s radio rock (Springsteen, The Who, The Pretenders). It’s only when Charlie bumps into ex-college roommate Alan (Don Cheadle) that he spies a potential playmate who won’t force him to face up to his past.

With its impressive central performance, this is undoubtedly Sandler’s film, yet by the final act you begin to wish that his electric presence was served with something a little more offbeat than the obligatory ‘is he insane?’ courtroom showdown appended by a series of textbook cathartic monologues. Still, even though ‘Reign Over Me’ acknowledges the legacy of 9/11, it thankfully never gets bogged down in emotive eulogising or political finger-pointing, focusing tightly on Charlie’s tragicomic emotional evolution.

Author: David Jenkins 2007-04-17 12:04:27

Time Out London Issue 1913: April 18-24 2007


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User reviews of this film

  • John said...
    Posted on Nov 13 2008 00:59 Liked this movie a lot, didn't have the usual American gloss throughout, nor ending and the moments of comic interjection help shape the characters creating an enjoyable movie.
    Sandler's character is left hanging at the end in such an ambiguous way, we don't know where he will go and we have such a sense of his venerability and feel there's such a long way to go for his recovery.
    Definitely not a feel good end, but neither a feeling that all is lost, simply that two people are trying to move forward and have some way to go. There are lots of contradictory reviews about this movie - too sombre / too much humour - I'd say there's a good balance, defintely worth a watch.
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