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ARRIVALS: Martin McDonagh Takes On Tarantino With ‘Seven Psychopaths’

If there’s a case to be made that turning one’s dark, twisted fantasies into plays and movies is good for the soul, Martin McDonagh is Exhibit A.  The platinum-haired Irishman has given the world some breathtakingly black comedy, such as his 2003 play about a child serial killer The Pillowman and, as of Friday, the slightly lighter Seven Psychopaths . But if he’s nursing a tortured soul, there was very little evidence of it when I interviewed him at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.  McDonagh, who looks like a character actor from a Bond film, laughs easily when he talks, often at his own wit. He’s also cheekily confident about his writing, which he should be. His 2008 directorial debut, the hitman buddy flick In Bruges  was cinematic poetry, and his bloody but surprisingly deep follow up,  Seven Psychopaths,  easily propels him into Tarantino territory. I smell a Bond film in his future. There’s been plenty written about the plot of the movie, so I’ll get right to the interview in which McDonagh talked about the unwritten film-industry rule that it’s okay to kill women but not pets in movies, his plans to take a break from psychopaths in the near future and why the next project we see from him will likely be another play. Movieline: What a cast you have.  Were they hard to line up?   McDonagh: No, strangely I knew four of the boys from before. Obviously, I know Colin [Farrell], and Sam [Rockwell] and Chris [Walken] and I did a play two, three years ago in New York, A Behanding in Spokane .  Actually, I knew Sam for about five years before we did that. Woody, strangely, I’ve known for about nine or 10 years because he’s a big theater fan. We hooked up in Dublin about 10 years ago and have stayed in touch since. I’d known a couple of the other actors socially. I met Abbie [Cornish] a year or two before and Olga Kurylenko a year or two before. And they were all first choices. With Woody, there was a situation with someone else. He almost did us a favor really because he came in at the last minute and knocked it out of the park. And Tom Waits I knew a little bit before, too.  Chris and Tom have been heroes of mine since I was eight or nine. I got Swordfish Trombones when it came out. I was 11 or so. He’s more than a musician or an actor. He’s an idol and a icon of American letters. I agree. So, to make an offer and have Tom say, “yes” made me go ‘Fuck!  I’m going to have to direct these people!  What am I going to say? I know nothing! [Laughs]    RELATED: McDonagh talks about  revisiting the “creepy fucked-up musical” he was working on with Tom Waits called A Very Dark Matter. The role seem tailor made for each of the characters. Is that a function of  how good a writer you are? Yes, let’s go with that. [Laughs]  None of these parts were written for those boys because the script was written about seven or eight years ago.  It was written just after the script of In Bruges but before I made Bruge . I knew at the time that I didn’t have the wherewithal to make this as my first film because there’s so much going on in it and so many cinematic aspects to it.  I thought it was best to go with something small-scale like Bruges where you have three characters in one town.  It’s almost like a play really. I think it’s a credit to how good they are as actors. They just take it and make it feel like it’s completely natural, as if they’re making this stuff up on the spot. No one talks like Chris. No one breaks up a script like he does. Even with the play we did,  I can’t hear anyone else’s voice in that character ever again.  Unless the next actor broke it up exactly like he did, it would feel wrong,  But, you know, none of that is on the page. Seven Psychopaths is framed by two suicides:  You’ve said this movie is about the deranged and the spiritual, and one of the suicides is deranged. The other is spiritual — a sacrificial statement made in an effort to end violence. But isn’t suicide an act of violence?   No, I don’t. I mean, it’s horrible, but I could never — I guess lots of my heroes went that way: Kurt Cobain, Richard Brautigan, the Beat writer. But yeah, I could never criticize it. It’s terribly sad, obviously, but I guess there’s some aspect of me that finds something honorable about it. For a movie in which a woman gets shot in the stomach and a head explodes, the final scenes are quite surprising.  After all of this outrageous violence and black comedy, it’s quite spiritual and moving. That was the hope: to have all these crazy comic elements but still totally go to that place. I’m glad you felt that way. I kind of feel like we did get there, and I’m happy about that.  It’s a much crazier movie than In Bruges was. Bruges was more simple and funny but melancholic and it’s own thing. But this is a crazy bag of lizards — on fire — that had to be spiritual. [Laughs] I loved Sam Rockwell’s riff on Gandhi’s “eye for an eye” line. [See the trailer below.] Is that something you’ve been thinking about for a long time? No, That just came out on the day when I was writing the script.  I don’t think there’s anything I could have done about it, but the next line — the punch line almost — always gets missed because there’s a big laugh. Sam says, ‘Gandhi was wrong’ but then what gets missed is “but no one’s got the balls to come right out and say it.” I think that would be good to go on a poster. Violence is a big theme in your work.  Where does Gandhi’s pacifism fall into your worldview? I’m a big believer. I just saw Alex Gibney’s   Mea Maxima: Culpa Silence in the House of God, and I was thinking you’d be great to direct a dramatic movie or a black comedy about that subject. Can you make a black comedy about sexual abuse these days?  I think it’s almost impossible, although what’s that one with Phil Hoffman that Todd Solondz did?   Happiness .  It’s black and it’s funny, but fuck. That kind of stuff is just too horrific for me to ever want to fool with.  Stuff like that is just too depressing to even get into. In the movie, Christopher Walken’s character Hans tells Colin Farrell that psychopaths “get tiresome after a while.” Since your work has dealt with quite a few psychopaths, is that you sending a hint that you’re thinking of moving in a different direction? Probably not!  Psychopaths are so much fun to write about.  Like Sam’s character in the film: if he doesn’t know what the fuck he’s going to say or do next, then you don’t.  That’s a joy as a writer.  Although I do want to get away from it a little bit. Gunfights and shootouts are exciting, but I think the next film is going to be much more of a quieter character piece and quite female based. There’s going to be a strong female lead — an older female lead, too. The script is already written. Do you have an actress in mind? Yeah, but I should talk to her first. [Laughs] What else can you tell me about it? I think that all I can say is that there’s a very strong female lead and two other male characters. Do you have a title? It’s convoluted deliberately:  Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri You really seemed to be having fun with thriller movie conventions in Seven Psychopaths . Christopher Walken tells Colin Farrell that the his dialogue for women is so terrible. [Laughs] Yes.  I admire that.  My own plays have very strong women characters, so, thankfully, I know that the next movie is going back to strong female leads. I wasn’t accusing you of doing that. Well, you should. It’s true. [Laughs]  The female characters are terrible in this. The actresses are fantastic, but they all die.  They all have only a scene and a half. Rockwell’s character also a cites a rule that “you can’t let the animals die in a movie. Just the women.”  Is that an unwritten rule of movie-making? It is. There were [studio] notes about a gun to a dog’s head and killing or not killing the dog. Not a word about shooting a woman in the stomach.  That’s the way it works. How many dead animals have you seen in the last year in movies?  And how many dead women have you seen?  I know what I’m putting my money on. Did you put that line in before or after the notes?  After. You’ve worked with Colin Farrell twice now. Why do you like him so much as an actor? We have a shorthand — we don’t really have to speak. We hardly saw each other for the three years or so in between films, and when we got together to read the script for Seven Psychopaths at his house, it was like not a day had passed since the last day of shooting. He’s very honest and very open to going anywhere and being truthful. And he’s very supportive. With the last film, I came in not having made a feature before. And he was the star. But every day, he’d help me through it. He’s just a lovely guy as well. Not starry at all. Did you have as much fun off the set as you did on it? It was lovely. Colin drove Sam and I out to Joshua Tree about four or five weeks before shooting because you can sense it if people are playing friends or lovers and there isn’t any kind of chemistry.  So, I wanted to make sure. They didn’t know each other terribly well before the film, so I wanted to make sure that they were both safe with each other. So we went off for a little weekend. And Sam and I drank too much, but we worked through the script in these little cabins in the desert. It was quiet and real and proper work.  But it was also the drive out there. Colin went into a service station and he got Sam that hat he wears in the movie. Right, and the cheese puffs and chocolate milk.  Eating cheese puffs and drinking chocolate milk was Colin’s idea.  Even when we were doing the play, Sam loves acting and eating at the same time.  And there are like ten scenes of him doing that. At the Toronto premiere they had their arms around each other. It sure looked like they had bonded. Yeah, I think they’ve stayed in touch. I’d like to do something with them again, too. And Chris and Sam are the same way. They are really good friends.  I guess the play helped, too.   So, for me, it was just capturing that love and chemistry, and I hope it’s one of the main things that comes through. What’s your relationship to theater right now?  I remember you saying not so long ago that you “respect film and disrespect theater.” I used to say that because it was true. I grew fond of a type of theater that I or Tracy Letts or Mamet or Shepard do.  I was disrespectful of that snooty, shitty English type of theater — or shitty American theater. It’s so expensive and sometimes it exudes that snottiness from the stage. So, that was what I was always fighting against. But I won the fight. [Laughs]  And I’ll keep coming back to it because it’s fun.  It’s also  easier to write a play. Or it was.  I’m going to go off after this and not do anything for a bit and let whatever story comes to me come.  If it’s a play, fine.  The play I did with Sam and Colin was done after making In Bruges . It was very easy to do. The good thing about a play is you can get in and out and do one in the course of six months. A film is two straight years. But I kind of like the fact that, having finished a film, it will be there for good.  Some of the plays I’ve done in the past — as happy as I’ve been with them, or as well as they’ve been received, they’re gone forever. I could never show you Sam and Chris’s performance. It’s just gone. So, there’s that aspect of it. When you say “after this,” do you mean after the next movie you’re making? No, I’m going to be really lazy. [Terrence] Malick was always one of my heroes and not just for the movies themselves. He could just stop for ages.  And now he’s doing the opposite. So we could see a play from you next instead of a movie? Possibly. I think it will probably be the next thing I will write. I’ve probably got two films that are sort of ready to go. And at the same time, I’d like to write something again for all the guys in this film.  Whether it’s a pairing or three of them. When you’ve got a relationship like that, you want to keep  working with them. I’m dying to know. Have you and Quentin Tarantino ever met? No.  Never. That’s interesting.  Given that you share a lot of influences, like Sam Peckinpah, for instance, I’m guessing that you guys would either love each other or hate each other . Yeah. I wonder, too. [Smiles] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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ARRIVALS: Martin McDonagh Takes On Tarantino With ‘Seven Psychopaths’

What Did Kim Kardashian Gift Kanye West for His Birthday?

Considering the gift Kim Kardashian bestowed upon Kanye West for his 35th birthday, following three mere months of dating, imagine what this reality star would purchase for the rapper if they did actually get married … Indeed, multiple sources confirm that Kardashian purchased for her man a black Aventador LP700-4 Lamborghini. The price tag on this slick sports car? $750,000. We’d be impressed – and nauseated – by Kim’s ability to easily afford such a gift, but come on. She doesn’t actually pay for anything. She just receives items for free after sending out a few Tweets and Facebook messages. “Thanks to all my fans,” Kanye wrote this week in response to many well wishes. “I am tweeting under the stage while Jay is rapping in Dublin on my birthday. You guys make all my dreams possible.” We wonder where pretending to date a woman best known for making a sex tape with Ray J fits into those dreams.

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What Did Kim Kardashian Gift Kanye West for His Birthday?

Nicki Minaj Denies Dancer Involvement In Fan Murder

‘Saddened to learn one of my precious fans; found tragically murdered in Japan,’ Minaj tweets Thursday of Nicola Furlong’s death. By Nadeska Alexis Nicki Minaj Photo: UMG Nicki Minaj ‘s Pink Friday Tour touched down in Tokyo, Japan, last week, and following one of the rapper’s colorful stage shows, things took a devastating turn: One of Minaj’s fans was murdered after attending the May 25 concert. On Thursday (May 31), Minaj took to Twitter to send condolences and deny allegations that her dancer was involved in the incident. “Saddened to learn one of my precious fans; found tragically murdered in Japan. My love & prayers are with the family of Nicola Furlong,” Nicki wrote . Saddened to learn one of my precious fans; found tragically murdered in Japan. My love & prayers are with the family of Nicola Furlong. — Nicki Minaj (@NICKIMINAJ) May 31, 2012 The 21-year-old fan, a foreign exchange student from Dublin City University in Ireland, was found dead in a Tokyo hotel room after attending Minaj’s show at Zepp Tokyo a few hours earlier. An early report on PerezHilton.com stated that Furlong and her friend Sarah Maher linked up with Minaj’s backup dancer James Blackston and another musician, Larry Perry, after the show, heading to the men’s hotel rooms. Furlong was later found strangled to death in the room, while Maher reported that she was sexually assaulted by both men in a taxi. After sending her condolences to the slain fan’s family, Minaj addressed rumors that her dancer was involved, tweeting directly at the celebrity gossip blogger. “My dancers had nothing to do w/this tragedy. No one in my entourage was questioned or arrested. They all flew home from Japan,” she wrote. “That person on your [site] is NOT my dancer. We do NOT know the men in custody. Too much misleading information.” According to IrishCentral , Tokyo police have released a statement confirming that they arrested two American men in connection with the crime. James Blackston, 26, and an unidentified 19-year-old have been taken into custody. “These two men allegedly took advantage of a female unable to resist due to the fact she was in a comatose state from a highly alcoholic beverage,” the report states, adding, “As that is an indecent act, they have been charged with quasi forcible indecency.” The police also confirm Maher’s story of being harassed in the taxi, noting, “On a taxi ride between Shibuya and Shinjuku, they took advantage of a woman by touching her body.” Furlong’s body is expected to arrive in her hometown of Curracloe, Ireland, on Thursday, where she will be laid to rest. The 21-year-old was studying at the Takasaki City University of Economics in Takasaki, Japan. Related Artists Nicki Minaj

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Nicki Minaj Denies Dancer Involvement In Fan Murder

Matrimony-dom: Michael Vick And His Fiance Kijafa Frank To Be Wed In Miami June 30th!

Sweet Black love! Michael Vick And Fiancee To Wed In Miami In June Eagles quarterback Michael Vick will tie the knot with longtime fiancée Kijafa Frink at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach on June 30. We hear the blessed bash will be for 300 people, and invitations started landing in mailboxes this month. Sources say the couple’s guest list includes Vick mentor and former Colts and Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy, Eagles coach Andy Reid, Vick’s NFL superagent Joel Segal, Eagles running back LeSean McCoy and other teammates. Fashion-loving Frink co-owns accessories line and boutique PNK Elephant. Heat star Chris Bosh was also married at the Fontainebleau; last July he wed Adrienne Williams in front of 300 guests including LeBron James and Dwyane Wade. Sounds like this will be quite a soireé. Hey guys, where’s our invite?!?! Image via Philly.com Source Continue reading

Bubblin In Dublin: Andre 3 Stacks Swirlin’ It Up In Ireland For New Film

Andre 3000 was caught smilin’ and swirlin’ in Dublin alongside actress Imogen Poots. The pair are set to appear in the film “All Is By My Side” together. Looks like his steez has rubbed off on her. Dang. We never seen Erykah make him cheese that hard. SMH @ this dude and all his layers of clothing. We don’t even want to know what’s going on under that orange hat. Hit the flip for more pics Continue reading

Bubblin In Dublin: Andre 3 Stacks Swirlin’ It Up In Ireland For New Film

Andre 3000 was caught smilin’ and swirlin’ in Dublin alongside actress Imogen Poots. The pair are set to appear in the film “All Is By My Side” together. Looks like his steez has rubbed off on her. Dang. We never seen Erykah make him cheese that hard. SMH @ this dude and all his layers of clothing. We don’t even want to know what’s going on under that orange hat. Hit the flip for more pics Continue reading

Andre 3000 To Play Jimi Hendrix In Biopic?

Outkast rapper will play legendary ax man, according to an online report. By Kara Warner Andre 3000 Photo: Johnny Nunez/WireImage The much-discussed yet long-delayed Jimi Hendrix biopic looks to be finally moving forward with a credible star attached: none other than Outkast’s Andre Benjamin . According to a report from the Irish Film and Television Network published on Monday (May 7), the Outkast rapper has been tapped to play the legendary ax man in an upcoming biopic titled “All Is by My Side.” Set during Hendrix’s time in England between 1966 and 1967, the film follows the icon as he began work on his debut, Are You Experienced, an album widely regarded by critics to feature some of the greatest guitar music ever created. The feature film will be written and directed by John Ridley, whose previous work includes the screenplays for “Red Tails” and “U-Turn,” as well as story credit on David O. Russell’s “Three Kings.” Although he’s more well-known for his contributions to music as part of the Grammy-winning hip-hop duo, Benjamin (a.k.a. Andre 3000) has had roles in several movies, including “Semi-Pro,” “Idlewild” and “Four Brothers,” and appeared on the FX TV series “The Shield.” “Considering his just-passable acting in ‘Idlewild,’ the jury’s still out on whether Andre can carry a movie on his own,” offered MTV News senior writer Gil Kaufman. “But given his virtual retirement from music since that movie’s release — ‘Semi-Pro’ was a small step in the right direction — and word that he’s been taking acting lessons, the Hendrix movie could do for him what ‘Dreamgirls’ did for Jennifer Hudson. “Andre has the musical chops, the artistic sensibility and a devotion to his craft that makes me think he wouldn’t take on this iconic role without knowing that he had something deep to offer,” Kaufman continued. “Plus, as he’s proven over and over with his many note-perfect, bulls-eye features on songs since he stopped recording his own albums, when he shoots, he shoots to kill.” MTV News reached out to Benjamin’s representatives about the report but had not received comment at press time. “All Is by My Side,” not to be confused with Legendary Pictures’ onetime plans to make a Hendrix biopic , is reportedly in pre-production with principal photography set to begin in three weeks in Dublin and Wicklow. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Artists OutKast Jimi Hendrix

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Andre 3000 To Play Jimi Hendrix In Biopic?

Westlife Win MTV’s Battle Of The Boy Bands

Irish boy band easily defeated Jonas Brothers in the championship matchup. By Christina Garibaldi Westlife Photo: Getty Images The fans have spoken. After two weeks of intense matchups and more than 12 million votes, Westlife have come out on top in MTV’s Battle of the Boy Bands . The Irish boy band easily defeated the in the final round, with more than 70 percent of the final vote. It was a hard-fought finale with both bands’ fanbases tirelessly voting in the hopes of giving their band the championship, but in the end, the international firepower of Westlife was too much for JoBros fans to handle. Westlife may not have been favored to win this competition, but from day one they proved they were fighters and were out to make a statement. They got everyone’s attention early on when, amidst accusations of cheating, they fairly beat out fan favorites the Backstreet Boys in the first round. They had no trouble at all beating out their next two opponents, O-Town and the Beatles, and managed to get past newcomers the Wanted in the Final Four to ultimately take on the Jonas Brothers in the championship. This win in the Battle of the Boy Bands seems to come at a perfect time for the group because their 14-year career is about to come to an end. Westlife have decided to go their separate ways after the conclusion of their Greatest Hits Tour, which kicks off later this week and wraps up at the end of June in front of a hometown crowd in Dublin, Ireland. Congratulations to Westlife and to all their extremely loyal fans: You have certainly proved your devotion and didn’t let up no matter how tough the competition was. Thanks to all the bands that participated. From newcomers One Direction, Mindless Behavior and Big Time Rush to veteran groups Boyz II Men and the Backstreet Boys , it was truly an epic tournament. But it wouldn’t have been possible without all of you, the fans. All of your vigorous voting resulted in some shocking upsets , some heated matchups and some rally-from-behind wins, making this a true battle of the boy bands. Are you happy with Westlife winning the Battle of the Boy Bands ? Let us know in the comments. Related Videos Battle Of The Boy Bands Related Artists Westlife Jonas Brothers

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Westlife Win MTV’s Battle Of The Boy Bands

Academy Names 30 US Finalists for Student Academy Awards

Thirty-five students from 20 U.S. colleges are eligible for the 39th Student Academy Awards, AMPAS said Wednesday. Academy members will view the finalists’ films at special screenings and vote to select the winners. Prizes include Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal awards, along with accompanying cash grants of $5,000, $3,000 and $2,000. U.S. winners will join international students winners for a week of industry and social activities June 9 in Los Angeles. The list of finalists follows. Narrative
 : Benny , Huay-Bing Law, University of Texas at Austin
 Contra, el Mar , Richard Parkin, University of California, Los Angeles
 Hatch , Christoph Kuschnig, Columbia University
 Mr. Bellpond , A. Todd Smith, Brigham Young University
 Nani , Justin Tipping, American Film Institute 
Narcocorrido , Ryan Prows, American Film Institute
 The Recorder Exam , Bora Kim, Columbia University
 Requited , Madeline Puzzo, Point Park University
 Under , Mark Raso, Columbia University Documentary
 : Dignity Harbor: A Home Away from Homeless , Michael Gualdoni, Lindenwood University
 Dying Green , Ellen Tripler, American University 
Hiro: A Story of Japanese Internment , Keiko Wright, New York University
 Lost Country , Heather Burky, Art Institute of Jacksonville 
Love Hacking , Jenni Nelson, Stanford University
 Pot Country , Mario Furloni, University of California, Berkeley
 Reporting on The Times: The New York Times and the Holocaust , Emily Harrold, New York University
 Smoke Songs , Briar March, Stanford University
 Why Am I Still Alive , Hanzhang Shen, School of Visual Arts Animation
 Chocolate Milk , Eliza Kinkz, University of California, Los Angeles
 Cowboy, Clone, Dust , Matthew Christensen, New York University
 Eyrie , David Wolter, California Institute of the Arts
 The Jockstrap Raiders , Mark Nelson, University of California, Los Angeles
 La Lune et le Coq , Raymond McCarthy Bergeron, Rochester Institute of Technology
 Lizard and the Ladder , Aaron Bristow, Utah Valley University 
My Little Friend , Eric Prah, Ringling College of Art and Design
 Reviving Redwood , Matt Sullivan, Ringling College of Art and Design
 Shinobi Blues , Yue Liu, School of Visual Arts Alternative 
 Falconer , Micah Robert Barber, University of Texas at Austin
 In Between Shadows , Tianran Duan, University of Southern California 
Last Remarks , Umar Riaz, New York University 
Peace at Home , Avital Epstein, Florida State University
 The Reality Clock , Amanda Tasse, University of Southern California
 SiSiSiSiSiSiSiSiSiSiSi , Juan Camilo González, University of Southern California
 Terra Cotta Warrior , Bin Li, Rochester Institute of Technology
 Us , Alex Lora, City College of New York

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Academy Names 30 US Finalists for Student Academy Awards

REVIEW: Kathleen Turner’s a Kick — Up to a Point — in The Perfect Family

Casting Kathleen Turner as a small-town mom nominated for “Catholic Woman of the Year” is about as risky as it gets in The Perfect Family , first-time director Anne Renton’s soft-willed religious tolerance parable. The whiskied voice alone makes it sound like Tallulah Bankhead has risen from the dead and crashed the sacristy where Monsignor Murphy (Richard Chamberlain) is laying out his vestments for Sunday Mass. But as the anodyne network drama title suggests, petty ironies are more this movie’s speed. Turner plays Eileen Cleary, pious community pillar and well-blinkered mother of a lesbian daughter named Shannon (Emily Deschanel) and philandering son Frank Jr. (Jason Ritter). Eileen’s husband Frank Sr. (Michael McGrady) first appears to be the long-suffering one: Eileen quietly relishes her identity as the local do-gooder; if her insistence on the Clearys’ arid weekly family dinners is any indication, maintaining that identity may have more to do with her good works than Christian selflessness. In fact Frank Sr. was a handful in his day; 10 years sober, his role in their relationship has a distinctly penitential vibe. But then everyone seems to humor Eileen. A religious dinosaur roaming a modern world, for much of the film she is the one who requires tolerance. Shannon is five months pregnant and set to marry Angela (Angelique Cabral), a union everyone but Eileen accepts, including Angela’s brassy Latina mother (Elizabeth Peña). After her poor reaction to this news sends Shannon to the hospital (a soap opera move that happens twice), Eileen goes into charitable mode, bestowing kindness on the sinner but continuing to hate the sin. Frank Jr. gets stricter treatment, but then he is leaving a wife and kids for a manicurist (Kristen Dalton); the suggestion of vaguely defined unhappiness in his marriage is meant to instill sympathy. The plot hinges on the anticipation of the Archbishop of Dublin’s arrival, when he’ll forgive everyone’s sins and decide who’s the Catholic-est of them all. Eileen’s main competition is a supercilious church groupie and longtime rival named Agnes (Sharon Lawrence). Agnes is open about her hypocrisies, where Eileen keeps up a tight social front. That she doesn’t seem to have a problem lying about her loved ones opens the quality and function of Eileen’s faith to question, but the script (by Paula Goldberg and Claire V. Riley) falls short of matching Turner’s game performance with a character study that teases out the complications of a self-identifying good Christian. Instead the tone hovers between mild satire and soapy melodrama. Launched into the space between those two modes, a line like “I don’t have to think, I’m a Catholic!” — Eileen’s response to an accusation of closed-mindedness — falls flat. Especially when compared to the recent Natural Selection , in which a woman stifled by a dogma-driven life goes rogue, The Perfect Family seems to resist introspective pit stops, cruising toward its tidy resolution with a host of missed opportunities in its wake. Even Eileen’s climactic confession feels like a clockwork bid for empathy. At critical moments Renton’s direction feels a couple of seconds off the beat; often the dramatic center of an obviously dramatic scene (Eileen’s home interview with a church delegation and Frank Senior’s sudden flight from the marriage are two examples) never quite materializes. It’s still a kick to watch Kathleen Turner don a housedress and trade soothing pieties with Richard Chamberlain. The Perfect Family feels like it could have been more than that, but I suppose counting its blessings is the more Christian thing to do. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Kathleen Turner’s a Kick — Up to a Point — in The Perfect Family