Welcome to the Rileys (15)

Film image

The ViewLeeds Review

StarStarStarNo StarNo Star
Review byMatthew Turner18/11/2011

Three out of Five stars
Running time: 110 mins

Quietly assured and superbly written, this is an emotionally engaging drama with a trio of terrific performances from James Gandolfini, Kristen Stewart and Melissa Leo.

What's it all about?
Directed by Jake Scott (son of Ridley), Welcome to the Rileys stars James Gandolfini as Indianapolis plumber Doug Riley, whose wife Lois (Melissa Leo) has become an agoraphobic after the tragic loss of their teenage daughter in a car crash two years previously. Doug has sought solace of his own in an affair with waffle waitress Vivian (Eisa Davis), but when that comes to a sudden and equally tragic end, he is utterly devastated.

However, while on a business trip to New Orleans to attend a plumbers' convention, Doug meets foul-mouthed young stripper-slash-prostitute Mallory (Kristen Stewart) and decides that he's going to take care of her. At first Mallory assumes his motives are sexual and can't understand why he won't take advantage of her, but the two gradually bond after Doug helps fix up her run-down flat.

The Good
The performances are excellent: Gandolfini is engaging and likeable as Doug (as well as pulling off a passable Midwest accent), despite his affair with Vivian and we correctly sense that he's a troubled man with a kind heart who has entered into an affair partly because he doesn't know how to help his wife (who has also shut down, emotionally). Similarly, Stewart is suitably spiky as Mallory, delivering a performance that should silence some of her Twilight critics, while Leo is typically brilliant as Lois, who slowly comes back to life when she decides to go after Doug (the first time she smiles is one of several lovely character moments).

There isn't much more to the plot, but Scott's quietly assured direction keeps things moving at a decent pace and the script carefully avoids many of the expected clichés. There's also a nicely naturalistic feel to the film with various scenes unfolding in a believable manner rather than feeling forced or over-scripted.

The Bad
That said, the low-key approach backfires slightly when it comes to the ending, which initially feels a little underwhelming, although a nicely written coda ultimately compensates. Similarly, the script stutters somewhat towards the end and can't quite resist spelling out a little more than it needs to, as regards Doug's motivations.

Worth seeing?
Impressively directed and sharply written, Welcome to the Rileys is an emotionally engaging drama with terrific performances from its three leads. Worth seeing.

Film Trailer

Welcome to the Rileys (15)
Be the first to review Welcome to the Rileys...
image
01 Focus (15)

Will Smith, Margot Robbie, Rodrigo Santoro

image
02 Selma (12A)

David Oyelowo, Carmen Ejogo, Tim Roth

image
03 Far from the Madding Crowd (tbc)

Carey Mulligan, Tom Sturridge, Matthias Schoenaert...

image
04 Chappie (tbc)

Hugh Jackman, Sigourney Weaver, Sharlto Copley

image
05 A Most Violent Year (15)

Oscar Isaac, Jessica Chastain, David Oyelowo

Content updated: 27/10/2015 16:09

Latest Film Reviews

Film Blog

Urban Pundit

Keep up to date with everything in film and cinema at Urban Pundit, the exciting new blog.

Film of the Week

The Conjuring (15)

Hugely enjoyable, genuinely scary horror flick that provides a welcome throwback to classic 1970s chillers, thanks to impeccable production design, a superb script, powerfully atmospheric direction, intense set-pieces and terrific performances.

Latest Close Up

Noah Baumbach Interview

The Frances Ha director discusses co-writing the script with Greta Gerwig, shooting against the backdrop of New York and the real lives of the city’s people, Greta Gerwig’s performance, the music in the film and the picture's visual style.