Wasn't it just yesterday in a comment thread when someone mentioned Meryl Streep & Jeff Bridges not having worked together. To which I was all "hey, they're the same age but they never let actresses play romantically opposite actors the same age!" Funny how these things pop up in the internet ether and the next thing you know, we all seem like prophets.
The Bridges & The Gummers
Jeff & Meryl know a little something about longterm coupling
But I'm burying the lead... or at least muddying it. Okay. As you may have heard Streep & Bridges are close to signing for a marital drama called
Great Hope Springs about a couple who've been together for decades having an intense weekend therapy session that will decide the fate of their marriage.
I always argue with myself about movies in development. To wit:
Meryl Streep and Jeff Bridges working together = Probably gah!some and reason enough to be very excited.
But...
Another marital drama for Jeff with a blonde lovely (see also:
The Door in the Floor) and it's
not Michelle Pfeiffer
again??? Only La Pfeiffer would make me sad about a Streep/Bridges pairing. I just don't get what the problem is with getting
The Fabulous Baker Boys onscreen together again?
<-- Jeff @ Michelle's star ceremony in 2007From all reports ever shared orally, written on paper, or otherwise recorded in the history of the existence of the world and its movies, Jeff and 'chelle are
as super
fond of each other offscreen as they are amazing together onscreen, which is to say: very very very fond of each other. How did Pfeiffer tagging along on his Oscar campaign (
It wasn't just Oscar night. There was also Palm Springs) go unnoticed by everyone in world who might be involved in movie industry dealings that might lead to them reuniting, fictionally speaking.
But, okay. What's that?
Oh yes, the
Great Hope Springs director is
Jessie Nelson, the woman who made
I Am Sam, and we don't care for that movie so much.We thank it for bringing us wee
Dakota Fanning (nice to meet'cha!) but otherwise we have very little time for it even though we thought Pfeiffer was sort of quite good in a weird/thankless/unlikeable way. So maybe it's best that she not repeat that situation.
If that movie is indication, which it might not be since it was a first film,
Great Hope won't be subtle and that might be bad for the material since marital dramas that are too histrionic are really hard to sit through and often titled
We Don't Live Here Anymore or
Revolutionary Road.
Plus, if we're being honest we all know that Streep is a big ham -- a big ham we love, don't forget. (More soon on
the Streep series. I'm just a few days behind.) So if a director WANTS big attention grabbing acting and doesn't want her to save some for the next movie, you'll get it
all. But therein lies the rub. You can't say that you weren't getting it all with Sean Penn in
I Am Sam even as you wanted to give at least half of it back.
Finally, if Streep is doing a marital drama, the movie has a big old cloud hanging over its head and that cloud's last name is Kramer. As in
Kramer Vs. Kramer. Because, how you gonna measure up
Great Hope Springs? Tread carefully.
The third crucial role of the psychiatrist is not yet cast. Philip Seymour Hoffman had to pull out of the project to ruin
P.T. Anderson's
next masterpiece (argh and also: calm down if that sentence made you angry) so maybe somebody less ubiquitous but able to keep up with Jeff & Meryl is in order. Might I suggest David Strathairn? Doesn't he deserve better after
Good Night, and Good Luck.? Couldn't he have a go?
I'm trying to stop jabbering away.
I'm in a tailspin...
HELP. Talk to me.
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