![The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81bN3xPF0FL._AC_SL3840_.jpg)

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Royal Tenenbaum (Unforgiven’s Gene Hackman) and his wife, Etheline (Prizzi’s Honor’s Anjelica Huston) had three children—Chas, Margot, and Richie—and then they separated. Chas (Meet the Parents’ Ben Stiller) started buying real estate in his early teens and seemed to have an almost preternatural understanding of international finance. Margot (Shakespeare in Love’s Gwyneth Paltrow) was a playwright and received a Braverman Grant of $50,000 in the ninth grade. Richie (Rushmore’s Luke Wilson) was a junior champion tennis player and won the U.S. Nationals three years in a row. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. The Royal Tenenbaums is a hilarious, touching, and brilliantly stylized study of melancholy and redemption from Wes Anderson (The Darjeeling Limited). Review: Great movie. You can watch it over and over and still enjoy it. - This is an all-time classic. The performances by the young Ben Stiller and his contemporaries are stand-out. Gene Hackman plays an incredible character who is one of cinemas, most complicated and hilarious. If you haven’t seen this one, it’s a must see. Review: One of my top five desert island films - I absolutely get all the reasons why a person wouldn't like this film and that's completely fine. I don't think I'm somehow better or a part of this pretentious "in" crowd for loving it. Truth be told, when I saw this in the theater in 2002, I didn't like it for most of the reasons people have said. Then something happened when I watched it again a year later -- I loved it. I loved it irrationally. I loved it so much I thought I was in need of help because I couldn't understand why. For almost a year I watched it nearly every night. When it came on here, I watched it with glee, pausing often to examine the details of every scene (i.e. Ethlene's many suiters montage). There is a push/pull feel to "The Royal Tenenbaums" (and most Wes Anderson films) that often surpasses character development and plot. To me it's like entering a dream in a parallel universe that's real but somehow also stuck in that dream. The near constant dry humor makes me laugh out loud, even now. I love the often humorous montages, these meticulous dollhouse scenes, the constant symbolism, the hidden messages, the drawn out dialog but without warning you're hit with some very real, heavy, not so pretty dysfunctional, flawed scenes only to be put back into levity moments after. In many scenes, you're in both spaces at the same time. Not many films can get away with this. More on that in a second. Gene Hackman was brilliant as was Anjelica Houston, Danny Glover and Bill Murray. Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson and Kumar Pallana all embodied their strange characters beautifully. THE SOUNDTRACK!! Glorious. Perfect. Amazing. Wes Anderson always puts one hell of a soundtrack together and this one is one of the greatest of all time. The sequences and the soundtrack have become this warm center that play almost as important a role as the actors themselves. It's clear that taking on these one-dimensional cartoon characters who were once the "grass is greener" family and driving them into severe, comedic, absurdist, dysfunction in their adult lives is a way of saying "appreciate what you are and stop looking at other peoples' lives as though they're any more with it than you are." I think we all knew a family like this. There is a deeper undercurrent however that I think sidesteps the plot and character development entirely. It's why I think my love for this film is so bedrocked. Okay here we go, the "get it" factor: Luke Wilson's disturbing scene put it all into context. It was powerfully dark, perhaps one of the darker things I'd seen in a film. It made me want to spontaneously combust during that flash sequence to Elliott Smith (a whole other sad parallel there) only for me to immediately be condensed back into comic relief the very next scene. That's not easy to do but Wes Anderson pulled it off several times in Tenenbaums. I think that's where the absolute love of this format stems: This strange feeling of being pulled in and abruptly out of very profound moments and very comedic moments as if to be reminded "It's not really all that serious but it is, but it isn't." It brings about thoughts on life itself, real life, and maybe that's the message I needed to be reminded? It either clicks with you or it doesn't but The Royal Tenenbaums, at least for me, is one of those films I will never stop loving for everything it is and for everything it isn't, but is.
| Contributor | Anjelica Huston, Ben Stiller, Gene Hackman, Gwyneth Paltrow, Luke Wilson, Wes Anderson |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 6,022 Reviews |
| Format | Blu-ray |
| Genre | Comedy |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 50 minutes |
S**W
Great movie. You can watch it over and over and still enjoy it.
This is an all-time classic. The performances by the young Ben Stiller and his contemporaries are stand-out. Gene Hackman plays an incredible character who is one of cinemas, most complicated and hilarious. If you haven’t seen this one, it’s a must see.
A**R
One of my top five desert island films
I absolutely get all the reasons why a person wouldn't like this film and that's completely fine. I don't think I'm somehow better or a part of this pretentious "in" crowd for loving it. Truth be told, when I saw this in the theater in 2002, I didn't like it for most of the reasons people have said. Then something happened when I watched it again a year later -- I loved it. I loved it irrationally. I loved it so much I thought I was in need of help because I couldn't understand why. For almost a year I watched it nearly every night. When it came on here, I watched it with glee, pausing often to examine the details of every scene (i.e. Ethlene's many suiters montage). There is a push/pull feel to "The Royal Tenenbaums" (and most Wes Anderson films) that often surpasses character development and plot. To me it's like entering a dream in a parallel universe that's real but somehow also stuck in that dream. The near constant dry humor makes me laugh out loud, even now. I love the often humorous montages, these meticulous dollhouse scenes, the constant symbolism, the hidden messages, the drawn out dialog but without warning you're hit with some very real, heavy, not so pretty dysfunctional, flawed scenes only to be put back into levity moments after. In many scenes, you're in both spaces at the same time. Not many films can get away with this. More on that in a second. Gene Hackman was brilliant as was Anjelica Houston, Danny Glover and Bill Murray. Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson and Kumar Pallana all embodied their strange characters beautifully. THE SOUNDTRACK!! Glorious. Perfect. Amazing. Wes Anderson always puts one hell of a soundtrack together and this one is one of the greatest of all time. The sequences and the soundtrack have become this warm center that play almost as important a role as the actors themselves. It's clear that taking on these one-dimensional cartoon characters who were once the "grass is greener" family and driving them into severe, comedic, absurdist, dysfunction in their adult lives is a way of saying "appreciate what you are and stop looking at other peoples' lives as though they're any more with it than you are." I think we all knew a family like this. There is a deeper undercurrent however that I think sidesteps the plot and character development entirely. It's why I think my love for this film is so bedrocked. Okay here we go, the "get it" factor: Luke Wilson's disturbing scene put it all into context. It was powerfully dark, perhaps one of the darker things I'd seen in a film. It made me want to spontaneously combust during that flash sequence to Elliott Smith (a whole other sad parallel there) only for me to immediately be condensed back into comic relief the very next scene. That's not easy to do but Wes Anderson pulled it off several times in Tenenbaums. I think that's where the absolute love of this format stems: This strange feeling of being pulled in and abruptly out of very profound moments and very comedic moments as if to be reminded "It's not really all that serious but it is, but it isn't." It brings about thoughts on life itself, real life, and maybe that's the message I needed to be reminded? It either clicks with you or it doesn't but The Royal Tenenbaums, at least for me, is one of those films I will never stop loving for everything it is and for everything it isn't, but is.
N**N
Classic
Its a great movie. Highly recommend it must buy!!
L**.
must love off-beat humor
Brilliant cast, wickedly funny and witty off-beat, observant and absurdist humor. Visually enticing colors/framing as only Wes A can do.
J**A
The quality is great
Love this movie and the criterion quality is awesome
M**L
great, quirky film
Great, quirky film. I just had to see this, which I never had, after Gene Hackman died. Fun facts: Bill Murray, not exactly known as the easiest guy to work with, showed up on set on his days off to protect young director Wes Anderson from Hackman’s verbal abuse. Another fun fact: Luke Wilson was so infatuated with Gwyneth Paltrow, as his character was with hers, according to Murray, that he kept flubbing his lines. He never worked with Anderson again after previously being a recurring collaborator.
D**N
Two thumbs up
Love this movie never gets old
J**N
my favorite Wes Anderson movie
Man, this one really got me. I've been a fan of Wes Anderson for years now, but I had never gotten around to watching this one. It tells its story in the typical whimsical fashion you expect from Wes Anderson, but with unapologetic emotional sincerity. The film explores the fraught and complicated dynamic of adult children trying to have a relationship with a parent who emotionally abused them as children -- and it does so while masterfully weaving a tone of absurdity, whimsy, and real darkness. The editing and music choices are superb, and the performances strike just the right balance of straight and ironic. To be honest I'm not sure I could have appreciated this film had I watched it younger; I imagine I would have thought the film was too easy on Royal Tenenbaum himself (the father), rehabilitating a selfish man who did deep and lasting damage to his children. But now I find myself in a similar position to the Tenenbaum kids -- deciding to make an effort to have someone in your life and defining what that role is, despite the fact that they are deeply flawed and unlikely to change. I understand the calculus. This film genuinely helped me process some of those feelings, and maybe it will speak to you in the same way.
T**N
Ich wollte mich nur verabschieden....
sagt Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman), als er nach mehreren Jahren vor dem Haus, das er einmal verließ, um die "süsse¨Seite des Leben auszukosten, zu seiner (Noch)Ehefrau Etheline/Ethel (Anjelica Huston). Er sei ja so krank, womöglich hat er nur noch sechs Wochen zu leben. Deswegen ist er gekommen, sozusagen, um Abschied zu nehmen... Ethel sieht ihren Ehemann nach Jahren und ist NICHT froh. Sie kann ihm nicht vertrauen, diesem Lump, der sie mit drei Kindern allein ließ. Er war immer schon ein Ehemann, dem man nicht glauben konnte. Nur ist ihm Ethel, eine promovierte Archeologin (die in NY irgendwas ausgräbt), zu oft auf dem Leim gegangen. Das war Liebe. Die beiden haben also drei Kinder, wobei Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) adoptiert wurde, was der stolze Vater bei jeder Gelegenheit auch verkündete. Die Söhne, Chas (Ben Stiller) und Richie (Luke Wilson) sind zwar leibliche Kinder, aber sie sind grundverschieden. ALLE drei sind aber hochbegabt. Chas ist mit 14 Jahren schon ein Finanzgenie, Richie ist auf dem besten Weg ein neuer Pete Sampras zu werden, Margot schreibt Bühnenstücke, die zwar niemand ganz genau versteht, aber...sie ist eine Tenenbaum. Ein GENIE! Vater Tenenbaum ist zwar als Anwalt erfolgreich, aber noch besser macht er die Sachen, die er nicht tun sollte. Er verspielt das Geld seines Sohnes Chas, er verliert die Lizenz wegen einer "kriminalen Kleinigkeit". Und lebt ganz gut in einem Hotel, bis seine Schulden so hoch sind und seine Finanzen so niedrig, dass man ihn rauswirft. Er beruft sich auf alte Freundschaft, will mit seinem Charme punkten. NICHTS! NADA! Raus, wenn er nicht bezahlt. Dabei lebte er 22 Jahre lang im Hotel, wer draufgezahlt hat, ist klar. Es war NICHT Royal! ER muß jetzt etwas finden. Und nicht so weit entfernt lebt noch immer seine Familie. Zwar sind sie nicht nur erwachsen, es ist auch vieles passiert. Ethel denkt nach 18 Jahren "Abstinenz" sich doch mit einem anderen Mann anzufreunden (etwas tiefer). Henry Sherman (Danny Glover) ist Steuerberater und ziemlich vermögend. Er ist Witwer und liebt Ethel aufrichtig. Auch Chas ist Witwer, seine Frau starb bei einem Flugzeugunfall, er, die Söhne Uzi und Ari und der Hund Buckley haben überlebt. Aber, Chas ist panisch besorgt, treibt seine Söhne in den Wahnsinn, macht alle möglichen Überlebensübungen. Am Ende zieht er in das elterliche Haus, dort fühlt er sich wohler - die Kinder auch. Und sicherer! Richie ist eine s.g. gescheiterte Existenz, der sich mit seinem Falken befasst, der Vogel versteht ihn...er ist seit eher in seine Schwester verliebt. Sie ist natürlich nicht die "richtige" Schwester, aber, es geht eben nicht. Und dann ist sie noch verheiratet mit einem Neurologen, Raleigh St. Clair (Bill Murray), der viel älter ist, sie aber wiederum liebt. Aber, auch sie flüchtet zu der Mutter in das Haus. So stehen die Dinge, als der "kranke" Vater vor dem Haus steht. Richie hat Mitleid und nimmt ihn zu sich in sein Zimmer. Dort wird ein Krankenbett bereit gestellt, ein "Arzt verschreibt die Medikamente". Außer Henry fallen alle auf den alten Herrn ein. Gut er hat auch einen Gehilfen, den "Diener" Pagoda (Kumar Pallana), der ihn über verschiedene Neuigkeiten auf dem Laufenden hällt... Das Haus ist groß, es steht irgendwo in Manhattan, könnte aber auch in einem anderen Teil von New York stehen. Einige Stockwerke, viele Zimmer, sehr bunte Farben (fast psychedelisch). Das Haus spricht laut die Geschichte dieser Familie. Noch ein Mensch will unbeding dazugehören, das ist ihr Nachbar aus der Kindheit, Eli Cash (Owen Wilson), der einige gute Bücher geschrieben hat, jetzt könnte er über den Drogenkonsum eine Doktorarbeit in wenigen Tagen produzieren. Auch er, ja, was sonst, ist in Margot verliebt. So, wie sich Royal (der Name ist Programm) langsam "step by step" ins Haus schleicht, die Familie auf seine Seite zieht, so kommen etliche Geheimnisse ans Licht. Und, wieder, man sollte sich nicht wundern, die meisten sind gar keine (mehr). Man wusste eigentlich schon über das Liebesleben von Margot, nur hat bisher keiner einen Detektiv beauftragt. Als ihr Ehemann das macht, wird allen klar: "ja, das ist es..."Und auch Henry ist fleißig und entlarvt den "kranken" (Noch)Ehemann. Es kommt noch vieles raus, nicht alles ist schlimm. Man hat ja fast 20 Jahre nicht darüber gesprochen. Ist überhaupt einer aus dieser Familie "normal", sagen wir, nur mit einem Geheimnis - eine Geliebte, nicht einige..., Gefängnis ist auch dabei (Royal hatte Ferien auf die Staatskosten gemacht, als er die Lizenz verlor und noch einige krumme Sachen durchgezogen hat)... Alle wollen fast um den ersten Platz kämpfen - ICH habe das gemacht, ICH habe das gewusst, NICHTS, was ich AUCH nicht gemacht hätte... Konfus? Ja, es sollte auch so sein. Deswegen brauch der Film, die Story einen Erzähler. Im Original ist das Alec Baldwin mit seiner markanten Stimme. Wes Anderson hat 2001 einen großartigen Film gemacht. Nach Rushmore (1998) ist das wieder eine bitterböse Komödie mit tragischen Momenten. Auch seine andere Filme sind sehr sehr gut...Ich muß hier Reklame für "Moonrise Kingdom" (2012) machen und will dazu nur schreiben - ansehen. Die Schauspieler*innen sind sehr gut. Meine Anjelica Huston ohne Make-up ist eine etwas neurotische Frau, wie könnte sie anders sein, aber sie kann sich gegen Gwyneth Paltrow nicht ganz behaupten. Dabei, man möge mir verzeihen, ist Ms. Paltrow nur selten "mein Fall", zu laut, zu kreischend, immer, naja, aber, HIER spielt sie die Rolle perfekt. Margot, eine tief gestörte junge Frau (sagen wir, zum Teil - Borderline), ist im ihren Leben steckengeblieben und hat fast alles versucht um sich zu behaupten, zu retten oder zerstören - je nach dem, Sie gehört nicht zu der Familie, obwohl sie da lebt, nicht zu ihrem Ehemann, sie hat eine Liebe...,die sie nicht leiben darf. Sie spielt fast statisch, immer in einem "Pelzmantel" angezogen, im selben Kleid. Sie ist zwar da, aber ihr Gesicht, ihre Mimik sind weit weg...Meine Hochachtung! Auch Ben Stiller ist nur zum Teil mein L**..., auch er spielt perfekt. Vielleicht sich selbst, aber er wächst in der Rolle... Die beiden Wilson Brüder, wer ist besser, für mich Luke, Owen spielt seine gewohnte Rolle. Und dann GENE HACKMAN - ein Schauspieler, den man erfinden müsste, wäre er nicht da....Keine Worte...man versteht es, wenn man ihn sieht. Bill Murray, naja, er ist da...seine Rolle gibt nicht viel her. Aber...Anderson mag ihn, das sieht man bei seinen anderen Filmen und der Mann kann ja spielen. Ein Film, der entfernt an Woody A. erinnert, aber ist um Längen besser. New York, die alten Häuser, die Szenerie, alles ist so wundervoll, dass man dorthin gehen möchte, nur um den Ort zu besuchen. Nicht dort - im Haus zu leben. Und die Musik, von Hey, Jude; bis Nico, Bob Dylan...ach, das alles gibt es. Und noch vieles mehr... 2006 hat mein Freund Daniel (Taiwan) eine Rezension geschrieben und 5 P gegeben. DIR ist meine Besprechung gewidmet. Und ALLEN FREUNDEN, die das lesen wollen. DANKE, TFK
J**F
Received
Great. Very happy,thanks.
A**E
A Moving Painting Motion Picture
I first saw this film as a sixteen year old on a family outing to the cinema not having heard of Anderson or the film itself. Family outings not being a regular thing at all for me it is extremely coincidental/fortunate/fateful that we should have seen together that night what I now regard as the most moving and funniest films about family relationships I have ever seen (On a par with the Sopranos for me). From the opening scenes with an instrumental Hey Jude the film put a smile on my face introducing the delightful unashamedly quirky characters. The ensemble cast really shines with no one actor trying to steal the show. The attention to detail Anderson shows is immense from costumes to locations (the main house in the film is an actual house redecorated and designed to Anderson's vision) to multiple two second shots (such as Buckley the dog in a cage in the aftermath of a plane crash). I have friends who don't like this movie and I really can't understand why not. The humour may not be everyone's cup of tea. Arrested Development was hugely influenced by this movie and this is also a huge crowd splitter. I am of the general belief that if you really love something and most people don't get it or like it, then you are right, it is great. Maybe you need an understanding or experience of depression, divorce, rejection, suicide, unrequited love, acceptance, loss, jealousy, regret to relate to the characters but who hasn't experienced some if not all of these things. Generally if you're a "deep thinker" you will love this film. Buy it now.
C**D
Not Criterion Collection as the picture depicts
I bought this thinking that this is a criterion collection dvd, but it is just a normal dvd. So subtracting one star for false advertising. But the movie is gold and needs to be in any Wes Anderson fan collection.
I**A
Great!
Fast delivery to México, the format look great. Very nice DVD and packaging.
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