I Smile Back Archives – We Got This Covered 4t612 All the latest news, trailers, & reviews for movies, TV, celebrities, Marvel, Netflix, anime, and more. Fri, 23 Oct 2015 04:18:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/wp-content/s/2022/04/WGTC_Favicon2.png?w=32 I Smile Back Archives – We Got This Covered 4t612 32 32 210963106 I Smile Back Review 6r1324 https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-review/ https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-review/#respond <![CDATA[Zachary Shevich]]> Fri, 23 Oct 2015 04:02:24 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[Reviews]]> <![CDATA[I Smile Back]]> <![CDATA[movie reviews]]> http://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/?p=466360 <![CDATA[
A staggeringly compelling performance from Sarah Silverman is the only surprise in the staid addiction drama, I Smile Back.]]>
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Snapshots into a life unraveling, I Smile Back is an unpleasant, earnest look at the struggles of coping with bipolar disorder and addiction. New Jersey housewife and mother of two children, Laney Brooks is prone to mistakes. Chief among them her decision to abruptly stop taking the lithium tablets that treat her mental disorder. She pounds alcohol at dinner, snorts cocaine in the bathroom, and cheats on her husband with their friend, but even when she’s home there’s a cavernous distance between the married couple.

This, the second feature film from Dare director Adam Salky, is the type of intimate suburban drama that’s a regular feature on film festival circuits. It feels recognizable if not familiar up until its depressing final few scenes. The biggest difference being that I Smile Back unexpectedly stars an unrelentingly vulnerable Sarah Silverman.

Silverman’s most notable work has been as a potty-mouthed, faux-naif stand up comedian with taboo-defying bits on abortion or incest. The affable, hard-edged charm she can exude is present in I Smile Back, too – particularly in the scenes where when Laney cuts loose and indulges her bad behavior – but more often, Silverman plays a frantic bag of mixed emotions.

She’s a capable actress, too, one with the emotional intelligence to portray her character’s erratic mood swings. The duality of her abilities in the role of Laney underscores the character’s core bipolar issues. There are two sides to Laney, her more jovial, normal self and the apathetic, thoughtless person she regularly becomes.

Beginning the film on the verge of a breakdown, Laney flips between attentive mother and frazzled mess. In one moment she’s scribbling her kids’ names on their sack lunches with crayons, and in the next she speeds out of the school parking lot on her way to a coked up rendezvous with her lover. Paige Dylan and Amy Koppelman’s script (based on Koppelman’s book of the same) insinuates that Laney has never fully escaped the trauma of being abandoned by her father at nine. Yet, her problems are so pressing that the movie’s brief tangent to confront Laney’s past feels like an uninformative disruption.

She’s a short fuse waiting to get lit. Laney can barely last through half a minute on the phone with another boy’s mother before screaming into the receiver and slamming it down. At some undefined point, she’s ceded the “good parent” duties to her husband Bruce (a steady and empathetic Josh Charles). “I don’t see why anybody bothers loving anything,” she confesses in bed to Bruce during a conversation about the family’s new pet dog.

Laney learns to expect impermanence in her life. Whether it’s through habit or by nature, the cycle of good days leading to bad ones is Laney’s only constant. It makes her a frustrating protagonist much the way that she would likely be a frustrating wife or mother. To that end, I Smile Back may be more effective than it is enjoyable. Its quick scenes provide scattershot glimpses into the Laney’s scrambled emotional state, but often the scene ends a moment too soon. I Smile Back might be a more satisfying film had it allowed us to sit at the visitor’s table or in the upstate New York bar with Laney just a bit longer. You want to see how the characters will react next.

Silverman remains captivating throughout, and it’s a shame that the film can’t match the energy of her performance. She embodies the stubborn evasiveness that causes addicts to relapse. Looking into her eyes, Silverman leaves no room for misinterpretation. Laney is palpably in or out of control of her actions. It’s easily the furthest stretch we’ve seen from the comedian as an actress – more surprising than her family-friend turn in Wreck-It-Ralph or her semi-serious part in Take This Waltz – comfortably and successfully diverging from comedy-driven material.

At a sleek 85 minutes, I Smile Back doesn’t offer much beyond the tropes of its genre. Laney falls victim to repetitive, irredeemable patterns, and it becomes increasingly difficult to tolerate despite her circumstance. Amy Koppelman’s story leaves little room for optimism. Though the film is well-acted, especially by its lead Sarah Silverman, I Smile Back is otherwise an unremarkable story of depression-fueled reckless compulsion.

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I Smile Back Review [TIFF 2015] 5m5yt https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-review-tiff-2015/ https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-review-tiff-2015/#respond <![CDATA[Anthony Marcusa]]> Sat, 12 Sep 2015 21:39:47 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[Reviews]]> <![CDATA[I Smile Back]]> <![CDATA[movie reviews]]> <![CDATA[TIFF]]> <![CDATA[TIFF 2015]]> <![CDATA[Toronto International Film Festival]]> http://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/?p=454122 <![CDATA[
I Smile Back features a potent performance by Sarah Silverman, who makes her character's downward spiral both captivating and tragic.]]>
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This is a capsule review. A full review will be posted when the film hits theatres.

What few smirks and grins exist in I Smile Back seem either in jest or vain. This harrowing downward spiral of a drama puts you next to Laney, a wife and mother struggling with mental health issues that manifest in dangerous lies, alcohol abuse, pill addition, and deviant sex.

Propelled from an impressive central performance by Sarah Silverman, I Smile Back introduces us to Laney as she’s seemingly on the verge of going over the edge. She reflects on family memories, though each one less pleasant than the last. While she’s doing this, she watches her husband (Josh Charles), son, and daughter play basketball outside. Then she does a line of cocaine, judges her naked body in the mirror, and gets on with her night.

A stint in rehab later follows fights with her husband and other disheartening betrayal. This leads to a confrontation with a man from her past, offering a semblance of what may have brought here her, but this film is less about the why than it is the how. Laney’s destructive behavior is deep-rooted in the past, but increasingly harmful in the present.

So it pains to watch. I Smile Back is an actor’s movie and a vehicle for Silverman, whose actions tear the viewer between sympathy and abhorrence; they tear her husband, too. The film doesn’t necessarily have a beginning or ending. Instead, it’s a staggeringly tragic part of Laney’s life that is captured. It seems to be a vicious cycle for her, too.

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I Smile Back Trailer Features Sarah Silverman Like You’ve Never Seen Her Before 48k1r https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-trailer-features-sarah-silverman-like-youve-never-seen-her-before/ https://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/movies/i-smile-back-trailer-features-sarah-silverman-like-youve-never-seen-her-before/#respond <![CDATA[Michael Briers]]> Fri, 11 Sep 2015 20:41:12 +0000 <![CDATA[Movies]]> <![CDATA[News]]> <![CDATA[I Smile Back]]> <![CDATA[Movie Trailers]]> http://wegotthiscovered.sitesunblocked.org/?p=454384 <![CDATA[
Depression is a raw and complex issue that plagues millions of people across the world every day; an invisible demon perched atop shoulders that manages gnaws at happiness from the inside out. It's a crippling condition, and one which will underpin Adam Salky's low-key drama, I Smile Back. ]]>
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Depression is a raw and complex issue that plagues millions of people across the world every day; an invisible demon perched atop shoulders that manages gnaws at happiness from the inside out. It’s a crippling condition, and one which will underpin Adam Salky’s low-key drama, I Smile Back.

Due to screen at TIFF later this week, Broad Green Pictures has revealed a new, emotional trailer for the film, showcasing an emphatic performance by Sarah Silverman. The comedian-cum-actress is set to play Laney, a woman who seemingly has everything – a loving family, suburban home, white picket fence – but begins to slide toward a downward spiral that involves alcoholism, adultery and drug abuse. Completely disillusioned with life itself, the unsettling footage has Laney travel through her day in a daze, only responding to stimulus that involves reckless, mentally damaging behaviour.

It’s a scenery-chewing turn that has caught the attention of critics, praising Silverman’s delicate and multi-faceted portrayal of a mother on the brink, and we’re intrigued to see how her performance pans out over the course of the I Smile Back. Josh Charles, Thomas Sadoski, Mia Barron, Terry Kinney, and Chris Sarandon complete the cast.

Following its debut at Sundance, I Smile Back is one of the many attendees at the ongoing Toronto International Film Festival. It’ll make its bow in theaters on October 23.

I Smile Back explores the life of Laney (Sarah Silverman), an attractive, intelligent suburban wife and devoted mother of two adorable children. She has the perfect husband (Josh Charles), a pristine house, and a shiny SUV for carting the children to their next activity. However, just beneath the façade lie depression and disillusionment that send her careening into a secret world of reckless compulsion. Only very real danger will force her to face the painful root of her destructiveness and its crumbling effect on those she loves.

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