The Wife
Rarely do I
Like a movie this much just
To hate its ending
Before I dive in to my review of “The Wife,” I’d like to make a formal apology to Movie Pass. I cursed its great name in my “Mission: Impossible” review, but I owe a lot to Movie Pass. It got me through awards season, allowed me to see movies I otherwise wouldn’t have in theaters (or probably at all) and it’s been my lifeline to the opposite of loneliness whenever a Friday or Saturday night would roll around and I didn’t have plans this summer. So while it’s on life support and things are looking grim, I just wanted to say thank you to Movie Pass while it’s still alive. So thank you, Movie Pass. You got me through some hard times, and now I want you to know that I’ll be staying with you for yours.
When my plans for the day got canceled yesterday, I immediately hopped on Movie Pass to see what was playing at my favorite indie theater out here, the Landmark Embarcadero. I’m not sure why I picked “The Wife,” but I think I was drawn to it because it reminded me of something I would see with my Bubby and Pop at their Landmark theater in St. Louis. The crowd certainly reminded me of them. The theater was nearly full, and I was easily the youngest in the theater by at least 20 years, and I’m quite confident that I’m the only 22-year-old in the world who will go to see “The Wife” by himself during its theatrical run.
[I also think that some of my reviews have begun to read like diary entries thanks to all the David Sedaris essays I’ve been reading lately.]
Everything you’ve heard about Cruella de Vil’s, er, Glenn Close’s, performance is true. As the title suggests, she is the movie. She is a real tour de force (I always loved seeing that phrase on the backs of my DVD cases), and there’s no other way to describe her performance as the partner of a Nobel Prize-winning novelist with some secrets of her own. Body language and other forms of nonverbal communication are key here – the way the camera lingers on Close’s face or follows her gaze, for example, are often more telling than the words coming out of her mouth. The plot is a bit contrived and the Big Reveal far from that revealing, but “The Wife” really excels as a character study. My dad once insulted my moviegoing intelligence by telling me that I didn’t like “The Darkest Hour” because it was too talky, but the amount that I enjoyed “The Wife” would suggest otherwise. The Wife is talky, yes, and probably the most adult movie I’ve seen since 45 Years (which I did actually see with my Bubby and Pop, so there you go), but I enjoyed it nevertheless. Until its ending.
I really was hooked on everything about “The Wife” until the last 10 minutes of the movie. If I thought the rest of the plot was a little contrived, then the ending blows my other pain points out of the water. It felt like a cop out, and completely took me out of a movie that otherwise felt mostly true-to-life. I was fully prepared to give “The Wife” a glowing Perfectly Toasted review, but the ending bumped it to a Crispy. I’m still interested to see if Close will get any love come awards season, but I like the endings of her movies better when she's playing opposite a certain spotted couple named Pongo and Perdita.