Waitress.

Waitress is sort of a smart date movie, a romantic comedy with a heavy dose of realism (well, until the end), or a sad portrait of rural American life with some dark comedy and a positive outcome.

The film revolves around Jenna (Keri Russell), a waitress in a pie shop in a small Southern town, who discovers she’s pregnant and is not happy about it. Her husband, Earl – good luck watching the rejuvenated Law & Order after watching Jeremy Sisto in this movie – is a colossal jackass, abusive, controlling, and dumb as a post. (He’s the one real stock character in the film.) She ends up having an affair with the town’s new gynecologist (Nathan Fillion), a married transplant from Connecticut. Jenna is surrounded by characters at the pie shop, from her two waitress co-workers to the gruff head chef to the 80-year-old owner, Joe, played to the hilt by Andy Griffith as a grumpy old man, who gives everyone (including Jenna) a hard time about everything, but also fills the slightly hackneyed wise-old-man role.

The movie is alternately funny and painful. Jenna has a talent for making up new pie recipes, but gives some of them silly names based on what’s going on in her life, like “I Don’t Want to be Pregnant with Earl’s Baby Pie.” (Her co-worker Dawn: “I don’t think we can put that on the menu board, huh?”) Yet aside from the rare moments of pleasure she gets at the pie shop, Jenna is miserable. She’s trying to save up to leave her husband, but is repeatedly stymied. She’s afraid the baby will trap her in a bad marriage forever. She makes a connection with her doctor, but there’s no future in that while both are married. It’s a black comedy in the sense that the underlying life we see is so grim, with Jenna trying to find a way to start her life over but unable to create the opportunity; in fact, she gets her chance through an external source, which sort of makes up for the way that the opportunities she creates are stymied one by one.

Waitress succeeds because the droll humor and the film’s obvious sympathy for Jenna (and thus ours) overcome its flaws. The turning point at the film’s end is a bit too perfect, but writer Adrienne Shelly did set it up throughout the movie. Earl is a one-note character, perfectly defined by the fact that when he comes to the diner to pick Jenna up, he starts beeping his horn before he’s even pulled up to the front door; I found myself averting my eyes almost every time he came on screen because his treatment of his wife was so dated and misogynistic. I suppose such people exist, but Earl seemed too sharply defined and exaggerated. There was something a little too creepy about Dawn ending up dating her “stalker elf,” Okie, even if the point was to provide an example to Jenna. And perhaps the movie’s biggest sin in my mind is the pie-making -pouring cooked custards into unbaked pie shells (you have to blind-bake them), laying the horizontal strips of a lattice top over the vertical ones (they should be woven), and mashing fillings after they’ve been poured into the crust (the juices would turn the bottom crust into mush).

These hiccups don’t interrupt the movie’s undeniable charm, driven by some witty writing and a fantastic performance by Russell in the lead role. It’s a date movie with brains, or perhaps an indie take on the romantic comedy genre, or a film that just defies easy categorization. We could use a few more of those, come to think of it. I’ve been debating offering some sort of easy rating system, but if I had one, this would get my highest mark.

As an aside, no review of Waitress would be complete without a mention of its tragic backstory. After the movie was completed but before it was accepted to the 2007 Sundance festival, writer/director Adrienne Shelly, who also played Jenna’s unlucky-in-love co-worker Dawn, was murdered in her Manhattan office-apartment by an illegal immigrant construction worker whom she caught stealing money from her purse. It’s an artistic loss, as Shelly clearly had a lot of promise as a writer, and a terrible personal loss for her family: Waitress was written a few years earlier as a love-letter to her then-unborn daughter, who appears at the end of the film as Jenna’s daughter as a toddler.

Comments

  1. Easily one of my favorite movies of the past year. Perhaps the ending was a little cliched, but didn’t it almost feel right after the hatred that you spend throughout most of the movie toward Earl. Anything much less would have left a really sour taste in my mouth after sitting through that movie.

  2. This is one of the personal best movies last year, and it was very sad to know that Adrianne Shelly was murdered after watching the movie.

  3. Sorry to be off-topic but you mentioned Law and Order. Does this mean you’ve been watching this season? I certainly agree that it has been “rejuvenated.”

  4. I’ve seen every episode of the original Law & Order except for two, at least one of which (“Sunday in the Park with Jorge”) was aired once and never repeated on NBC or TNT. And yes, I think this season has marked a big comeback for them – good cast, best writing in years. Unfortunately, SVU went into the toilet and we killed the season pass back in October.

  5. I Netflix’d this at some point last year, and found myself very underwhelmed by it, largely because of the ending, which I found to be far too happy, too idealized and just a massive copout. I say copout because she had been saving her money to leave her husband, looked to be in a hopeless situation, and all of a sudden, this ridiculous thing happens to her thanks to Matlock. Really bothered me.

  6. Hey Keith,

    Big tangential to the topic, but I just read an earlier post. You said you don’t read plays because they are meant to be performed and seen as such. What about a so-called ‘closet drama,’ popular in the 19th century, that was never meant to be performed? The best example I can think of off the top of my head is Goethe’s Faust, which surely should be required reading.

  7. I saw this movie a month or so ago, because: I like Keri Russell, and I had heard/read that it was a witty and funny movie.

    I wasn’t disappointed with Russell, but I thought the comedy wasn’t as witty as I had been foretold. The overall story arc, however, if you take the movie for what it is supposed to be, was very good.

    Overall, I enjoyed it and would recommend it to people, too.

  8. Saw this when it first came out on DVD and was disappointed. I didn’t expect great cinema but a fun couple hours… ugh. It was dull, with little humor, poorly written characters – Earl was from bad married guy 101 – and an almost too predictable, over-the-top happy ending. It was one of the two or three most overrated movies I saw this year.

  9. Earl was definitely the worst part about the movie.

    Rich J, I just prefer the way prose works.

  10. A throwaway comment, but I found it odd that you mentioned the construction worker was an illegal immigrant.

  11. I’ve always assumed that fear of deportation was a major motive for the crime. Not that it excuses what he did in any way, but it would at least support his “defense” that he killed her in a panic.