Film/Video/TV Annotations


Marvin's Room


MediumFilm
KeywordsAdolescence, Cancer, Caregivers, Children, Chronic Illness/Chronic Disease, Communication, Death and Dying, Disease and Health, Empathy, Family Relationships, Grief, Human Worth, Illness and the Family, Love, Mental Illness, Mother-Son Relationship, Pain, Rebellion, Stroke, Suffering
Summary

During the opening credits, the camera slowly pans over the myriad medications for Marvin (Hume Cronyn), the elderly, bedridden invalid cared for round-the-clock by his daughter, Bessie (Diane Keaton). The film opens with Bessie visiting Dr. Wally (Robert DeNiro), a pathologist cum primary care physician, for diagnostic tests which show that she has leukemia.

Bessie also takes care of her Aunt Ruth, whose electric unit for pain relief and penchant for soap operas provide comic relief in this bittersweet drama about families and responsibilities. Because Bessie's best chance for survival is a bone marrow transplant, she contacts her sister, Lee (Meryl Streep), estranged since their father's first stroke and Lee's decision not to help care for him.

Lee's oldest son, Hank (Leonardo DiCaprio), is a troubled seventeen-year-old who sets fire to their home and is hospitalized in a mental institution. Released for this special trip to visit his Aunt Bessie, Hank continues his rebellion by refusing to be tested as a possible donor. Lee is a dysfunctional mother: she does not respond to her son's apology regarding the arson, she has her younger son light cigarettes, and she confuses discipline with control.

The family unites in and around Marvin's room. Reunions are never as smooth as planned, and tensions, stored bitterness, and anger erupt. The sisters confront each other in their failures as sisters--Bessie had never contacted her nephews in any way and Lee had never looked back. But through it all, love and caring emerge: the sisters come to a new understanding, Bessie's reaching out to rebellious Hank is reciprocated, and Lee even learns to communicate caring to her son.

CommentaryThe acting is stellar in this film; the tenderness between the characters is poignant, never saccharine. Bessie's gentleness in caring for her father is a model of loving care. The script, written by Scott McPherson and based on his play, Marvin's Room, is intelligent, often humorous. There are also some nice cinematic touches, such as the fade transition from the bone marrow cells under a microscope to the colors of a stained glass window in the convent where Lee is harbored after the fire.
DirectorJerry Zaks
Leading ActorsHume Cronyn, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Diane Keaton, Meryl Streep
StudioMiramax
Year1996
Color/BWColor
Running Time98 minutes
Based OnMarvin's Room
Video SourceBuena Vista Pictures Dist.
MiscellaneousBased on the play, Marvin's Room, by Scott McPherson.
Annotated by Shafer, Audrey
Date of Entry 04/16/98
Last Revised 11/30/09