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The Soloist


Directed by: Joe Wright
Starring: Jamie Foxx
Genre:
Drama
Run Time: 117
min.
Release Date: April
2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
If there were ever any doubt that Robert Downey Jr. is one of our
best current actors out there, then this film should put them to rest.
Still having doubts? Check out his more current resume:
KISS KISS BANG
BANG,
GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK,
IRON MAN, and his amazing
TROPIC THUNDER. And these are just a select few that I’ve cherry picked.
This isn’t to say that Jamie Foxx (DREAMGIRLS) didn’t do a great job.
It’s just that Downey Jr. is showing up in some awfully great roles and
performing them to perfection, as witnessed here in THE SOLOIST.
This is a story close to my heart. Similar in theme to
LARS AND THE
REAL GIRL, this story doesn’t circle around a town coming together to
help one man’s pysche. This story is about two men who orbit in entirely
different galaxies and how a passing swipe ends up creating a lifetime
friendship. Yes, there’s the mental illness aspect to it and Foxx plays
the role of Nathaniel Ayers exceptionally well. His schizophrenia is
obvious, and living on the streets hasn’t helped. And when newspaper
reporter Steve Lopez (Downey Jr.) tries finding a story to write about,
he stumbles upon Nathaniel’s past as a Juilliard Music School drop-out.
Nathaniel plays a violin with only two strings, and as Steve Lopez
writes about his newfound friend in the paper, a donation comes floating
in: a beautiful cello.
This cello has multiple draws for Nathaniel, and some of them aren’t
good. The positives are that Nathaniel can play a beautiful instrument
beautifully. And that he finally starts forming a friendly tie with
someone (anyone!) It just happens to be Steve Lopez. Steve starts
showing him around the current musical scene. But with Nathaniel’s
reawakening comes the remembrance of his past and how he got to where he
is. His mental breakdown comes crashing back into current memory, even
as Steve, his new friend, tries to help him out more and more.
The side-story of Steve and his wife’s reconciliation (Catherine
Keener, AN AMERICAN CRIME) is pretty much fluff for the movie/story and
doesn’t add much. It is the touching and powerful story of a friendship
forming amidst a respect for one another, a love of music, and facing
the challenges of an oft-times debilitating mental illness that drives
this wonderful film.
And the music ain’t too shabby either.
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Image from The Soloist

DVD cost: $30.03
Purchase:
Tower.com
(Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The subject of the movie
is himself seen in the front row of the concert, during the last scene
of the movie..
Movie Quote: "I've
never loved anything the way he loves music."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Soloist
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