The Savages

2007 Comedy Drama

A pair of siblings are forced to set aside their discomfort with one another for the sake of their father in this low-key comedy drama from writer/director Tamara Jenkins. Wendy Savage (Laura Linney) is a struggling playwright living in New York City who works a day job to support herself and can't shake the feeling that she's failed as an artist. Wendy isn't especially happy about her love life either, gaining little self-esteem from her on-and-off affair with oversexed, married neighbor Larry (Peter Friedman). Wendy's anxieties about her writing career are intensified by the success of her brother, Jon (Philip Seymour Hoffman), who teaches theater history at a college in Buffalo, NY, and has published a number of books. While Jon's life seems fine on the surface, a case of writer's block has stalled work on his latest project, and he's deeply upset that his girlfriend is soon to leave the United States to return to her native Poland. Wendy and Jon don't get along and prefer not to see one another, but an unfortunate circumstance brings them together -- their father, Lenny Savage (Philip Bosco). Elderly Lenny has began showing signs of dementia, and shortly after he takes to smearing his feces on the walls of his Arizona home, his ailing long-term girlfriend suddenly dies. Wendy and Jon have little choice but to fly to Arizona and see what can be done for Lenny, but their long-simmering animosity makes it hard for them to deal with the realities of Lenny's condition. The Savages received its world premiere at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. more..

Director: Tamara Jenkins

Starring: Laura Linney,Philip Seymour Hoffman, Philip Bosco, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Cara Seymour

Reviews

  • The Savages is terrific -- a movie of uncommon appreciation for the nature and nurture that go into making us who we are, a perfectly calibrated drama both compassionate and unsentimental.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    27 April 2013

  • It is more sad-funny than funny-funny, but Jenkins has enough empathy and wit to realize that even the sad parts are, somehow, funny.

    Kirk Honeycutt - The Hollywood Reporter

    27 April 2013

  • Both Linney and Hoffman are so specific in creating these characters that we see them as people, not elements in a plot. Hoffman in particular shows how many disguises he has within his seemingly immutable presence; would you know it is the same actor here and in two other films this season, "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead" and "Charlie Wilson's War"?

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    27 April 2013

  • With the help of acting giants, Jenkins turns The Savages into a twisted, bittersweet pleasure.

    Peter Travers - Rolling Stone

    27 April 2013

  • While the film is heart-wrenchingly sad, it also is mordantly funny, uncomfortably prickly and above all, unflinching in its depiction of a believable sibling relationship.

    Claudia Puig - USA Today

    27 April 2013

Awards

  • Movie of the Year

    AFI Awards (2008)

  • Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role

    Academy Awards (2008)

     
  • Actor of the Year

    Central Ohio Film Critics Association (2008)

  • Best Actress

    Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (2007)

     
  • Best Actress

    Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards (2007)