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Allen MacDonald
“Life As A House” is an unapologetic “button pusher” designed to
manipulate your emotions and squeeze out your tears. Its structure and
characters are as subtle as a brick dropped on your head. Every line of
dialogue acts as a loaded gun of life changing sentiment. Be that as it
may, this is an effective movie that will likely win you over.
The story centers around George Monroe (Kevin Kline), a model builder
for an architectural firm who lives in a dilapidated shack that sits on
expensive beachfront property overlooking the edge of a stunning Laguna
cliff. George has become a listless, bitter man who has lost his zest for
life. We know this because he doesn’t shave and marches around his
frontyard wearing white briefs, often relieving his bladder off the
cliff.
George’s relations with his only child, Sam (Hayden Christensen) and
his ex-wife Robin (Kristin Scott Thomas) seem irreparably fractured. Sam
has become a lost, bitter, closed-off adolescent who angrily lashes out
at everyone who dares to love him. We know this because he has multiple
body piercings, swears loudly, listens to Marilyn Manson and uses drugs
like candy.
In one single, horribly bad day, George is fired then discovers he is
dying of cancer. This emboldens him to rip down the shack and force Sam
to spend the summer helping George build the dream house he no longer has
the time to put off, and maybe, just maybe, save his son from a path of
self-destruction. In essence, Sam becomes George’s final, most important
project.
The film succeeds best when utilizing its clever metaphors: George and
Sam’s bond deepens in perfect unison with the construction of the house;
the shack represents the baggage father and son must tear down before
beginning a new, stronger structure. The character contrasts are also
vividly drawn. As George deteriorates and numbs himself with drugs for
his physical pain, Sam grows stronger and weans himself off the drugs
that numbed his emotional pain.
“Life As A House” fails by trying to accommodate too many characters
and story lines. While the idea that George’s renewed spirit is
contagious and spreads to all those he meets is a good one, it also
spreads the story thin, throwing off the focus. In fact, a subplot
involving Sam’s sexual awakening with the next door neighbor Alyssa (Jena
Malone) becomes far more compelling than the central father/son story
thread. These scenes boast a touching range of depth as Sam and Alyssa
dance around their growing attraction until their magnetic chemistry can
no longer be ignored. As actors, Christensen and Malone blow away the
competition, but get shortchanged by useless characters who waste
precious screen time.
“Life As A House” is a glorified TV movie elevated by its acting
talent. This isn’t an insult. It’s a compliment. The movie wears its
heart on its sleeve, and although the heavy-handed dialogue may make you
cringe, it is engrossing. Despite obvious flaws, we know where the story
is heading from the start, so the entertainment comes from the surprises
we encounter on the way.
“Life As A House” doesn’t pull any punches, it wants to make you cry.
I mean, I didn’t cry, but I’m different. Really. I swear.
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