Magnolia
Released 1999
Stars Jason Robards, Philip Baker Hall, Tom Cruise, John C. Reilly, Melora
Walters, Julianne Moore, William H. Macy, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeremy Blackman, Melinda
Dillon
Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
"Magnolia" is operatic in its ambition, a great, joyous leap into melodrama
and coincidence, with ragged emotions, crimes and punishments, deathbed scenes, romantic
dreams, generational turmoil and celestial intervention, all scored to insistent music. It
is not a timid film. It is an interlocking series of episodes that take place during one
day in Los Angeles, sometimes even at the same moment. Its characters are linked by blood,
coincidence and by the way their lives seem parallel. Themes emerge: the deaths of
fathers, the resentments of children, the failure of early promise, the way all plans and
ambitions can be undermined by sudden and astonishing events.
The actors here are all swinging for the fences, heedless of image or self-protective
restraint. Here are Tom Cruise as a loathsome stud, Jason Robards looking barely alive,
William H. Macy as a pathetic loser, Melora Walters as a despairing daughter, Julianne
Moore as an unloving wife, Michael Bowen as a browbeating father. Some of these people are
melting down because of drugs or other reasons; a few, like a cop played by John C. Reilly
and a nurse played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, are caregivers.
All of these threads converge, in one way or another, upon an event there is no way for
the audience to anticipate. This event is not "cheating," as some critics have
argued, because the prologue fully prepares the way for it, as do some subtle references
to Exodus. It works like the hand of God, reminding us of the absurdity of daring to plan.
And yet plan we must, because we are human, and because sometimes our plans work out.
"Magnolia" is the kind of film I instinctively respond to. Leave logic at the
door. Do not expect subdued taste and restraint, but instead a kind of operatic ecstasy.
At three hours it is even operatic in length, as its themes unfold, its characters strive
against the dying of the light, and the great wheel of chance rolls on toward them.
Summary by Roger Ebert