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Diminished Capacity 2008 123movies

Diminished Capacity 2008 123movies

Jul. 04, 200892 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Diminished Capacity 2008 123movies, Full Movie Online – Cooper is a Chicago journalist with post-concussion memory loss. His mother wants help moving Uncle Rollie, who’s facing his own fading memory, into a care home. Cooper’s boss tells him to take a few days, so Cooper drives home. Rollie doesn’t want to move, and his salvation may be a rare baseball card of a 1908 Chicago Cub. Maybe they can sell it in Chicago for enough for Rollie to live at home with help. Cooper teams up with Charlotte, his recently-divorced high-school flame, and her son; they take Rollie to a memorabilia market. Rollie insists on keeping the card in his pocket, while more than one rascal wants to divest the old man of his treasure. Can the underdogs carry the day?.
Plot: A Chicago journalist suffering from memory loss takes leaves from his job and returns to his rural hometown, where he bonds with his Alzheimer’s impaired uncle Rollie and his old flame.
Smart Tags: #alcoholism #baseball #divorced #uncle #memory_loss #journalist #memorabilia #chicago_cubs #old_flame #baseball_card #mother_son_relationship #world_series #typewriter #single_mother #security_guard #rifle #pond #poetry #painting #office #losing_a_job


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Ratings:

5.5/10 Votes: 1,286
35% | RottenTomatoes
54/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 13 Popularity: 3.533 | TMDB

Reviews:

Alan Alda has not been this funny since Hawkeye Pierce
Maybe Diminished Capacity isn’t “all that and a bag of chips,” as a friend of mine is fond of saying. But I’ll tell you what, it’s pretty funny. I think I heard more laughing than anything I’ve seen at Sundance since Napoleon Dynamite and Little Miss Sunshine. That bodes well for the box office prospects of this film.

Alan Alda gives a terrific performance as Rollie Zerb, a small-town Missouri old-timer with Alzheimer’s, who lives with his sister (and some hilarious but unidentified guy named Wendell in a trailer by the house). They are visited by Cooper (Matthew Broderick), who arrives at his mother’s request to help talk Uncle Rollie into a nursing home. Cooper has mental problems of his own, due to a recent concussion. While back in town, he runs into Charlotte (Virginia Madsen), his high school sweetheart who is recently divorced from the town mayor. And somehow Rollie, Cooper, Charlotte and her son wind up heading to Chicago, where they are going to try to sell Uncle Rollie’s rare baseball card of Frank Schulte, from the 1908 Chicago Cubs (the last Cubbies team to win the World Series!).

Broderick is solid, in his awkward, understated way. Madsen is the straight woman. But Alan Alda makes the movie as Uncle Rollie, and dominates the screen in almost every scene. And yes, if you squint you’ll see shades of Hawkeye Pierce, but his Rollie character is a complete departure from anything he has done in the past, and probably his best comedic performance since MASH.

The script is very well-written, if a bit awkward at parts, and under the direction of veteran actor Terry Kinney, the action moves along briskly. There is probably more tension than there needs to be, which doesn’t really fit. But when you’re not wincing, you’re generally laughing. There are some hilarious lines, and a plenty of feel-good vibe. Everyone will like this movie.

Sundance Moment: Broderick was much better on stage than I would have expected. He was there with his wife, Sarah Jessica Parker, whose movie Smart People had premiered at Sundance the night before. Alan Alda was charming as well. Bobby Canavale was in two movies playing at Sundance this year, the other being The Merry Gentleman.

Review By: wmjaho
Solid Enough Cast But A Largely Disappointing Story
Essentially you have here a “B” list cast of actors (Matthew Broderick, Virginia Madsen and Alan Alda) – none megastars, but all solid actors – who, as you would expect, put on decent enough performances. The problem with the movie is a story that misses its potential. I acknowledge that I haven’t read the book. Maybe this worked better on paper, but on screen this was lacking.

Broderick played Cooper, an editor for a Chicago newspaper who suffers a head injury, and then is called away himself to help care for his uncle (Alan Alda) who’s in the early stages of dementia. Madsen is some type of old flame for Cooper with whom he reconnects in his hometown. All three were fine in their roles but this movie had basically two directions in which it could have gone, did a little bit of both and, ultimately, because it had no focus on either, was a disappointment.

This could have been successful as a light-hearted comedy; a humorous look at dealing with the problems of dementia. Alda captured that well; he was believable as a dementia victim, and there were things like his fish-writing obsession that could have made this touchingly funny, but those moments were few and far between. Or, this could have gone the route of emotional drama, as we watch Alda’s character of Rollie (and those around him) deal with his decline, but again those moments were few and far between. There was a moment when I thought the movie had made a choice – the very powerful scene when Rollie is missing and Cooper finds him in anguish in the bathroom at the card show; lost, confused and embarrassed at what’s happened. But that moment also gets lost. Instead of that, the story focuses for some reason on the old baseball card – a 1909 Cubs card that Rollie’s grandfather gave him as a keepsake and that he now wants to sell. Even that could have been touching enough, but the card ends up being used primarily as a prop for staging slapstick humour, especially the ridiculous “fight” scene at the end of the movie.

Also burdened with unnecessary characters (especially Donny, but even Madsen’s Charlotte to an extent) this was really a disappointment. 3/10

Review By: sddavis63

Other Information:

Original Title Diminished Capacity
Release Date 2008-07-04
Release Year 2008

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 32 min (92 min) (USA)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Comedy
Director Terry Kinney
Writer Doug Bost, Sherwood Kiraly
Actors Matthew Broderick, Virginia Madsen, Alan Alda
Country United States
Awards N/A
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Arriflex 416, Cooke S4 Lenses
Laboratory The Lab at Postworks, USA (processing)
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 16 mm (Kodak)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (master format), Super 16 (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (blow-up)

Diminished Capacity 2008 123movies
Original title Diminished Capacity
TMDb Rating 5.9 13 votes

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