independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > General Discussion > the pursuit of happYness-film AND book-appreciation thread
« Previous topic  Next topic »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 06/07/08 3:20pm

jonylawson

the pursuit of happYness-film AND book-appreciation thread

http://www.chrisgardnerme...n/book.htm

i was so impressed-the book is such a genuinly awe inspiring story-and being a dad it holds much more resonance


quincy troupe did a great job(which is ironic cos i just got through his MILES DAVIS book)

the film i thought was fantastic-will smith was ON POINT and hasnt been this good since ALI

his son was a revalation as well!

this film did my jaded soul the world of good!! normally a cynic like me would dismiss this kind of film.....bit i dunno man it touched me which is more i can say for most films out there

You may come out rebuking yourself for your laziness or your choices or your fatalism or your fears, but you will come out glad you saw this movie.
by Karina Montgomery | January 31, 2007
Blog Article | Discuss Article The Pursuit of Happyness, inspired by true events in the life of Chris Gardner, is a perfect movie to show around Thanksgiving and the winter holidays. This is a story of a man against whom all the world seems to conspire (and indeed, it seems very little was out of his power to avoid), but he is no victim. Chris is not a whiner, a quitter, a defeatist, or even unrealistically ambitious. He knows his strengths, he knows what's truly important, and, armed with those two things, sets off on an impossible journey.

His graciousness and humility balance tidily against his steely resolve and his dogged determination. When things able to sink no lower, then they do. He is honor bound to his quest to survive. This film is a moving portrait of the working poor, the forgotten demographic so casually tossed aside by rich fatcats who want to eliminate social services. Had this man gone on welfare or received food stamps or any aid not provided by a church soup kitchen, no one could accuse him of laziness or abusing the system. It's worth noting that the rise of Reaganomics' "trickle-down" theory was concurrent with these unfathomable challenges. It is bitterly notable too that the job he wants is to manage the money of the extremely solvent.

I personally am constantly in a delicate struggle for financial solidity and resources, but I have never felt so guilty for complaining about having only $40 in my checking account for the last 2 weeks of the month. For the record, it's my own guilt; the movie does not condemn the comfortable or the wealthy. Chris has no resentment for the haves. I mentioned his graciousness before. He is not playing the part of Stepin Fetchit to gain access to unearned loot, nor is he in denial about his plight. His struggle is private, it's his own, and he gives every cell in his body to overcome it.

Will Smith does a fantastic job, his movie star cockiness vanishing into a genteel and trustworthy warmth. His son is played by his real life son, Jaden Christopher Syre Smith, and their chemistry is vital to the movie. Jaden, 5, has little to do as an actor or a character than react to the situations Chris' life puts them in, but you can see good parenting and training is on both sides of the screen. The son is gracious like his father, even in terrible circumstances. Thandie Newton plays another understandably unsympathetic character in this film, as Chris' wife. I hope someone gives her the chance to break away from that type, but she is well suited for the role here.

Happyness, you will have noted, is misspelled in the title. It's relevant to the story, but to me it symbolized that there is no perfect happiness, you can have flaws in it but still have the meaning. The word pops up in the Constitution more than once, the pursuit thereof being an inalienable right of all people, and a core foundation of the American dream. For some, happiness is more money than they can spend. For others, their family, security, and a job well-earned and well-done is the goal. The pursuit is the right we must not squander. Smith gives of himself in this role in a way you might not have seen before, but most importantly, we feel what is truly important to Chris.

Our life is controlled partially by our choices and partially by fate. Chris Gardner shows us the power of will over that balance. You may come out rebuking yourself for your laziness or your choices or your fatalism or your fears, but you will come out glad you saw this movie.

~~~~~
This review copyright 2006 Karina Montgomery.
Feel free to forward but with this signature attached.
Member: Online Film Critics Society
Archive at www.cinerina.com/mtarchives
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 06/09/08 7:08pm

PaisleyPark508
3

avatar

The Pursuit of Happyness, comes on regularly on HBO, I watch it if I have the time, everytime. It puts life into perspective, and makes you appreciate what you have. Will and his son, play of each other perfectly. heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 06/15/08 8:29pm

kimrachell

great movie!!! i cried so much when i was watching it, because i was homeless as a child, for one year! i could really relate to the story!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 06/16/08 10:31am

PaisleyPark508
3

avatar

I have never ever been a Will Smith fan, but I watched with my husband because he is a fan, and I was very impressed with the emotion Will Smith put in to his charachter. Good job, powerful movie.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 06/16/08 10:43am

rasplicious

avatar

I enjoyed that movie and it's message "never give up". Good film.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > General Discussion > the pursuit of happYness-film AND book-appreciation thread