Chicago Sun-Times

Playing a real person again, Adam Sandler pulls it off

- Movie Columnist BY RICHARD ROEPER Email: rroeper@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ richardroe­per

If you tasked me with programmin­g an Adam Sandler Film Festival, I would have no problem coming up with a list of titles to fill an entire day and evening — with enough leftovers for a double feature the next morning as well.

Now we can add “The Meyerowitz Stories ( New and Selected)” to the fairly impressive roster of films featuring quality performanc­es from the star of “Little Nicky” and “I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry.”

In the Woody Allen film “The Meyerowitz Stories ( New and Selected),” — sorry, the Noah Baumbach film that feels like an uncanny cover version of a New York- centric Woody Allen film — Sandler gives one of his most authentic performanc­es.

Sandler’s Danny is the classic hapless, sad- sack, middle- aged man who is at his most hilarious ( to us) when he’s at his most serious. His entire life can be summed up in a few words:

Underachie­ving, overlooked disappoint­ment.

Danny is a failed musician and recently divorced stay- athome dad. Before his teenage daughter ( Grace Van Patten) goes off to Bard, Danny takes her to visit his father Harold ( Dustin Hoffman), a newly retired college professor and a sculptor of minor renown, and Harold’s fourth wife, the brassy and boozy Maureen ( Emma Thompson).

Harold has the intellect and the quick- witted personalit­y to command a room, but he’s also an insufferab­le, self- pitying boor, forever prattling on about how his work deserved a wider audience. Danny has an almost pathologic­al need for his father’s approval — but Harold is too busy singing his own praises, casually insulting Danny or boasting about the accomplish­ments of Danny’s younger half- brother, Matthew ( Ben Stiller), to even notice.

Oh, and there’s a third

‘ THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES’

Netflix presents a film written and directed by Noah Baumbach. No MPAA rating. Running time: 110 minutes. Opens Friday at Landmark Century Centre and on demand. grown sibling: Jean ( Elizabeth Marvel), who has somehow managed to carve out a life even sadder and more pathetic than Danny’s.

Writer- director Baumbach (“The Squid and the Whale,” “Frances Ha”) is a skilled wordsmith and keen observer of multi- generation­al family dynamics, and how the son becomes the father even as the son has vowed with every inch of his DNA that he will never be like his father. Harold is the kind of guy who will go out of his way to escalate a confrontat­ion, and his sons are forever telling him to let things go — and yet they’re both just as bad as their father.

Resentment and envy and anger are the cornerston­es of the Meyerowitz family dynamic.

Danny resents Matthew’s favored- son relationsh­ip with their father. Harold envies his far more successful colleague ( Judd Hirsch). Matthew is seething with rage at Harold because even though Matthew has become a profession­al success in California, within minutes of Matthew arriving in New York, his father can still manipulate him and make him feel like a failure. Jean just wishes somebody would notice her.

They’re a smart and sophistica­ted and relatively privileged bunch, but they’re miserable and ridiculous, which makes for some poignant insights and some sharp comedy. We enjoy the Meyerowitz clan, even as we praise the heavens we’re not like them and we don’t live next door to any of ’ em.

 ??  ?? Ben Stiller and Adam Sandler in “The Meyerowitz Stories.” | NETFLIX
Ben Stiller and Adam Sandler in “The Meyerowitz Stories.” | NETFLIX

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