Well, La Dee Dah. Annie Hall a.k.a. Diane Keaton, has gone and directed herself one hell of
a movie. At heart, this is a family saga - a coming-of-age story about a Jewish family in
the early '60s. 12-year-old Stephen Lidz (Nathan Watt) has a younger sister he likes to
tease, a beautiful, loving mom (Andie MacDowell) he adores and a father....well, dad (John
Turturro), a self-styled inventor, is more nutty professor than parent, but he means well.
All is well with the Lidz clan until one day Mom is sent to the hospital and diagnosed with
cancer. In order the escape the aching reality of her illness, Stephen flees to a the
eccentric netherworld inhabited by his two crackpot uncles (Maury Chaikin and Michael
Richards). If Chaykin, Richards and Turturro (who wonderfully underplays here) are the
movie's splendid comic heart, MacDowell is its tender, humane soul; she gives a portrayal
that refuses to turn saintly or saccharine. And when an entire cast is this good the
director is doing something right. Keaton has made a movie whose delicate balance of humor
and pathos calls to mind the marvelous "My Life as a Dog." This film is more than just
special; it's a gift.
Copyright 1994-2008 Film Scouts LLC
Created, produced, and published by Film Scouts LLC
Film Scouts® is a registered trademark of Film Scouts LLC
All rights reserved.