RiverRun International Film Festival
“I’ll See You In My Dreams” features something increasingly rare in movies these days: an elderly protagonist. (Writer/director Brett Haley just turned 30, which makes the film even more of a welcome oddity.) Blythe Danner stars as Carol Petersen, a graying widow who resists moving into a home despite tons of social pressure from her bridge group. Living in her own house grants her a certain sense of freedom and control that she stubbornly resists ceding to anyone.
But over the course of the film, Carol finds herself opening up in ways she has not in decades thanks to the entry of two men into her life. The first, Sam Elliott’s Bill, assumes the role of a traditional gentleman suitor, drawing Carol into intimate situations she has avoided for decades. The second, Martin Starr’s poolboy Lloyd, marks a decidedly more platonic bond; the two simply enjoy each other’s company and conversation.
Carol never gets explicitly romantically courted by Lloyd, although a few sparks definitely fly between them. Thankfully, Haley resists exploitative territory with their relationship, just allowing it to shed light on what both parties have to gain from intergenerational communication. Carol and Lloyd share some beautiful, sweet moments together in “I’ll See You In My Dreams,” and their exchanges are the kind of thing that deserve imitation and replication in mainstream cinema.
Since Carol does not technically involve herself in a love triangle, a comparison to “It’s Complicated” seems like a bit of a stretch. But her dual male companions, the occasional ribald interlude (mostly with her bridge girls played by June Squibb, Rhea Perlman, and Mary Kay Place), and the keen emotional insight into one woman’s complex experience recall what writer/director Nancy Meyers does so well. In its pared-down specificity, Haley’s “I’ll See You In My Dreams” delights and charms to a similar degree as the Streep-starrer. B+ /
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