The Private Lives of Pippa Lee

By Mike Bashien
Released: July 10, 2009
Production
This is a movie about getting to know Pippa Lee. From the second of her birth to the day she finally does something out of character. With a heavy dose of voiceover her life unfolds before us, and all of the questions we have from the first scene are answered slowly throughout - like her matter of fact rhetorical statement, "I wonder if i'm having a very quiet breakdown". As the story unfolds we are given memories and present day occurrences that spark our interest in Pippa, but there is also plenty of uninteresting and slowly paced moments where your investment in her is lost. Many things come across as cliche and drab while others, like her sleepwalking to the market to buy cigarettes that she then chain smokes without knowing in her car, are downright hilarious. This movie takes patience, and a desire to look deeper into what it may be showing and not exactly telling about a woman. For Pippa could be any woman, and she is many woman, all rolled into one debacle of a package.
Acting
Maria Bello how I fell in love with thee. With your diabolical performance as Pippa's mother Suky you casually grace the screen and then thoroughly overtake it. As you generously consume your "medicine" resulting in a myriad of personalities that include the doting mother, the manic depressive staring absently at the ceiling from your bed, or a woman ferociously cleaning the floors high on your beloved pills you give insight into not only why Pippa became who she did but also the state of many a housewife sequestered in her white picket fence lifestyle. Yours is a troubled soul, full of lies and deceit to your children and husband, and with every moment you promise to change you break our hearts a little more and at the same time make us desire to learn more about why you are overtaken with such sadness. Any viewer will welcome the opportunity to watch you meltdown at the dinner table.

Then there is Pippa. The aftermath of a troubled childhood due to her mothers lack of stability. The role is played by two actresses, Robin Wright Penn and Blake Lively. Blake Lively gives little to the troubled teen/young adult Pippa as she comes across as any angst ridden teenager but Robin Wright Penn delivers a performance that couples simplicity and extreme depth with just the look in her eyes. As the grown up Pippa she captures the enigma that is her character. The uncapturable personality of a woman whom you think you have figured out but never possibly will. In each and every line she speaks, gesture she makes, and moment she appears on screen the mystery unfolds slightly of who is Pippa Lee but Penn manages to keep her consistently an arms length away from the viewer. Just as it should be in a story such as this where even Pippa herself does not really know who she is, but only the person she has become from the choices she has made.



Genres
Comedy, Drama
Release Date
July 10, 2009
MPAA Rating
R
Running Time
93 minutes
Time Period
Present Day
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