A young couple living in a Connecticut suburb during the mid-1950s struggle to come to terms with their personal problems while trying to raise their two children. Based on a novel by Richard Yates.
Leonardo DiCaprio
Frank Wheeler
Kate Winslet
April Wheeler
Kathy Bates
Mrs. Helen Givings
Michael Shannon
John Givings
Kathryn Hahn
Milly Campbell
David Harbour
Shep Campbell
Dylan Baker
Jack Ordway
Richard Easton
Mr. Givings
Zoe Kazan
Maureen Grube
Jay O. Sanders
Bart Pollock
Max Baker
Vince Lathrop
Max Casella
Ed Small
Christopher Fitzgerald
Party Guest
Jonathan Roumie
Party Guest
Neal Bledsoe
Party Guest
Marin Ireland
Party Guest
Samantha Soule
Party Guest
Heidi Armbruster
Party Guest
Sam Rosen
Party Guest
Maria Rusolo
Party Dancer
Gena Oppenheim
Party Dancer
Kathryn Dunn
Party Dancer
Joe Komara
Party Dancer
Allison Twyford
Party Dancer
John Ottavino
Other Actor in the Play
Adam Mucci
Other Actor in the Play
Jo Twiss
Other Actor in the Play
Frank Girardeau
Other Actor in the Play
Catherine Curtin
Woman in Audience
Dan Da Silva
Knox Elevator Operator
Keith Reddin
Ted Bandy
Ryan Simpkins
Ed Small
Ty Simpkins
Vince Lathrop
Jon Sampson
American Express Clerk
Peter Barton
Campbell Kid
Kevin Barton
Campbell Kid
Evan Covey
Campbell Kid
Dylan Clark Marshall
Campbell Kid
Chandler Vinton
Knox Receptionist
Bethann Schebece
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Kelsey Bair
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Jason Etter
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Adair Moran
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Tommaso Antico
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Justin Misenhelder
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Will Vought
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Emaline Green
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Isabella Zubor
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Kal Thompson
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Racheline Maltese
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Lauren Hubbell
Vito's Log Cabin Dancer
Duffy Jackson
Steve Kovac
Dan Zanes
The Steve Kovac Band
Vince Giordano
The Steve Kovac Band
Jon-Erik Kellso
The Steve Kovac Band
Andy Burton
The Steve Kovac Band
Will Reardon-Anderson
The Steve Kovac Band
Alex Hoffman
The Steve Kovac Band
Kristen Connolly
Mr. Brace
John Behlmann
Mr. Brace
Director
Sam Mendes
Novel
Richard Yates
Screenplay
Justin Haythe
November 21, 2019
5
***What if Jack & Rose married and settled into the conventional American grind?***
The Wheelers are a couple with two kids living in the suburbs of Connecticut in the ’50s. Frank (Leonardo DiCaprio) marches off to the big city five times a week, ten hours a day, to a job he hates whereas April (Kate Winslet) takes care of things on the home front, including their hardly-seen children. April's dream of being an actress has failed and she vents her frustrations on Frank. Emasculated, he has a meaningless affair to prove his manhood to himself. Meanwhile April suggests a wild idea for them to move to Paris because Frank's war tales describe it as a place of exhilaration and April desperately wants him to regain that aura of vitality he had when they first met. Will they escape the comatose corner they've painted themselves into or will they join the masses of (supposedly) living dead in their midst?
Eleven years after their mega-hit "Titanic" (1997), Kate and Leonardo reunite for "Revolutionary Road," released in January, 2009. Kate has shed her unappealing baby fat and is now a curvy beauty whereas Leonardo is a man and no longer has that boyish vibe.
I enjoy a good drama now and then, like the excellent "Snow Angels" (2007), the potent "Grand Canyon" (1991) or the masterpiece "Dead Poets Society" (1989), but "Revolutionary Road" fails to achieve the greatness of those films, mainly because the characters and their story are fairly boring. The film's just not that engrossing, which is my core criterion for evaluating any flick. In quality and theme, it’s reminiscent of “Joe Versus the Volcano” (1990).
Like “Joe,” it’s a slyly offbeat drama despite being about American conventionality. The best parts involve Michael Shannon as John, the mentally disturbed son of the real estate lady (Kathy Bates), a fascinating character. Everyone else in the Wheeler's lives thinks their plans to give up their suburban paradise are crazy (big surprise). But John sees the brilliance and necessity of the plan. In other words, the only person who 'gets' the plight of the Wheelers is this nigh-insane dude. But he's not really crazy. John is gifted at seeing through a facade to get to the core of a matter, the awesome or awful truth. And he has no inhibitions about speaking his mind, good or bad. At heart, John is a beatnik, the 50's precursor to the hippie. He represents the first wave of the 60's counter-culture, a generation of youth who discerned the cracks in the post-war "paradise," and rebelled, for better or worse.
Some important questions are raised: Is life just having a marriage, a family, a well-paying job (you loathe) and a nice home in the pleasant suburbs, plus cigarettes and drinks without end? Or is there more? What about love? What about genuineness? What about unrealized, unused or ignored talents and dreams? What about (gasp) God?
"Revolutionary Road" has some other positives: it's expertly made, has a good score by Thomas Newman and evokes some haunting moments.
Some have suggested that the film is one POSSIBLE outcome if Jack had survived the end of “Titanic” and married Rose: The once spirited, carefree Jack settles into the robotic grind to pay the bills while Kate is left frustrated at home in suburbia. Regrettably, it’s overall mediocre due to the unengrossing characters and their story, which of course links to the theme its espousing.
Yet it does have flashes of greatness and it makes you reflect on its points. In some ways, the same message is addressed in "Dead Poets Society" (and "Grand Canyon," to a lesser degree): rejecting the box society tries to confine you, throwing caution to the wind, and going after your dreams. The difference is that "Dead Poets Society" (and "Grand Canyon") accomplished this with absorbing stories whereas "Revolutionary Road" doesn't. Generally speaking, that is. Yet it's still worth catching if its themes trip your trigger.
The film runs almost 2 hours and was shot in Connecticut & New York City.
GRADE: C+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$35,000,000.00
Revenue:
$76,000,000.00