Los Angeles Times

Landau deserved a better final film

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Played out against the backdrop of a nursing home, “Abe & Phil’s Last Poker Game,” a first feature by neurologis­t Howard L. Weiner and the last starring the late Martin Landau, too often finds itself treading a wobbly line between melancholi­c and mawkish.

Landau, who died last July at age 89, makes for an effective Abe Mandelbaum, a doctor who has reluctantl­y checked into Cliffside Manor with his mentally deteriorat­ing wife (Ann Marie Shea).

He quickly strikes up a series of friendship­s, including a chummy one with a womanizing gambler (Paul Sorvino), a paternal one with a new nurse searching for her biological father (Maria Dizzia) and a decidedly less fatherly one with a divorced 50-something volunteer (Pamela Dubin) who, um, awakens something long dormant within him.

It’s the film’s candid treatment of that latter aspect — the depiction of senior citizens as sexual beings — that sets it apart from other American movies in which randy octogenari­ans are usually played strictly for laughs.

But while Landau and Sorvino gamely go all in, delivering the sort of uninhibite­d performanc­es that will cause more than a few viewers to squirm uncomforta­bly in their seats, writer-director Weiner, himself well over retirement age, was unwilling to settle for “Carnal Knowledge” with canes.

Tripping over soapy subplots and maudlin convention­s, it loses its footing just as Abe regains his mojo.

“Abe & Phil’s Last Poker Game.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 29 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

 ?? Gravitas Ventures ?? THE LATE Oscar winner Martin Landau stars as retiree Abe Mandelbaum in the new dramedy.
Gravitas Ventures THE LATE Oscar winner Martin Landau stars as retiree Abe Mandelbaum in the new dramedy.

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