Sally Field has played the straight and narrow when it comes
to her fine dramatic prowess (as in “Places in the Heart” and “Norma Rae”) but in
recent years, she’s had to contend with roles that did not give her ability to
stretch that prowess into more than what those roles demanded (“Lincoln”, “The
Amazing Spider Man”, etc.) a lot of it because of her maturity [more so because roles for actresses at a certain age
are far and few between]. As a child, I
remember watching her in the television sit-coms “Gidget” and “The Flying Nun”
and I always sensed she had a comic “quirkiness”; and, I also remember her
powerful and powerfully haunting star turn as “Sybil”, the
based-on-a-true-story movie about an abused young girl with multiple
personalities.
Sally Field as "Norma Rae" |
Made for TV movie "Sybil" showcased a versatile Sally Field. |
Field plays Doris Miller…let’s call her a “50+ish”, single, never-married
bookworm/antiques hoarder (“I can’t believe people throw out these beautiful
things!”) Staples-junkie office worker tied to her 9-5 routine in the
accounting department of an advertising company. Then, one day at work, she meets John
Fremont, the company’s gregarious new art director (an enthusiastic, spot-on
performance by Max Greenfield), about 30 years her junior and for Doris, it’s
every romance novel ever written come alive! In fact, the movie “asides”
capture daydreaming moments in Doris’ mind when she
thinks about John and is imaging what they could be doing.
Enraptured by the
possible thought there could be some interest from him, she delves into his
personal life (thanks to a social media savvy niece) and begins to partake of
John’s world: going to her first ever electronica concert, singing karaoke, hanging
with him and his friends, doing a photo shoot for an artist’s CD cover and even
supporting John’s girlfriend at her singing debut.
It’s all well and good… and also
not well and not good, especially when her new circle of young-er friends doesn’t
include her longtime BFF Roz (played to the tee by the very welcomed Tyne Daly)
who doubts Doris’ love interest can stand, much less reciprocate, Doris’
affections.
Add to this mix Doris’ suppressed ire about the death of her mother
and her brother’s self-absorbed life, and there’s a fine balancing act Field
does to keep both these sides of Doris’ life from converging. Inevitably, Doris succumbs to her infatuation
and manages the hutzpah to bare her soul - probably the only time in her life
to do so – to John, someone who has affected her life in the most amazing way.
Director Michael Showalter keeps the storyline moving and draws a magical
performance from the cast, especially Field who, as Doris, shows a good depth
of acting range – from elation to rejection, fragile to empowered,
light-hearted to self-hatred….it’s all there in this formulaic but unexpected
screenplay that I found myself both laughing and crying (more so commiserating)
at the same time.