The Face of Love
The Face of Love
PG-13 | 07 March 2014 (USA)
The Face of Love Trailers

A widow falls for a guy who bears a striking resemblance to her late husband.

Reviews
SpuffyWeb Sadly Over-hyped
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Ariella Broughton It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
Kien Navarro Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
italianredneckgirl Sigh. To be honest, I only watched this film because Robin Williams appeared in it. I'm teething to complete his collected works. This film did nothing, added nothing to his resume, except maybe generate income and keep him busy. Not a huge fan of Annette Bening. But I do like and enjoy Ed Harris' work. I mean, C'mon, those blue eyes! Nikki, played by Bening,is in mourning. It's clear to the viewer and to everyone excepting Nikki herself. While on vacation, celebrating their anniversary, Nikki and Garrett (also, obviously played by Harris) are in Mexico. There is am accident and Garrett dies while swimming during rip tide. Nikki is devastated and returns home and immediately gives all of Garrett's things away. Probably not a great idea, but done anyway. Seemingly, Robin Williams' character, Roger, is also widowed but had held on to everything from his wife. Nikki and Roger are clearly friends. Roger wants more but she doesn't feel the same. Enter really awkward experience of Tom. A dead ringer (pardon the pun)for Garrett and Nikki is lost in reverie. The film, from this point on, was super awkward and made me, as a viewer, feel more like someone witnessing a train- wreck, unable to do anything but also unable to look away. I was so uncomfortable for poor Tom that I simply found myself waiting for him to figure it out. The dialogue didn't matter. The pacing didn't matter. We all knew, as soon as Tom found out, he'd be gone. And, of course, he was. After a few close run ins (the restaurant, Roger, Summer, and the multiple name stumbles by Nikki ) and suddenly we find ourselves right back in Mexico, right back to the beginning. Predictable and actually anti-climatic. As soon as Tom was on his way to the bar, i was already looking for the picture. Sigh. And then it's done. And it should have been. The ending, with Anne,in the gallery want even necessary. But leaving the questionable did he die or what question hanging in the air was also predictable. Overall, truly disappointing. And honestly, incredibly exhausting. But, watching it solely for the purpose of cataloging Robin Williams roles. Perhaps if they had developed his character, or made him the male lead, this film might have actually been worth watching.
SnoopyStyle Nikki Lostrom (Annette Bening) is devastated by loss of her husband Garret Mathis (Ed Harris). Summer (Jess Weixler) is their daughter. It's 5 years later. She stages open houses. Roger Stillman (Robin Williams) is her neighbor and friend. She starts stalking and then dating college professor Tom Young (Ed Harris) who looks exactly like his dead husband. She hides his resemblance from everyone. He's still friends with his ex Ann (Amy Brenneman).Arie Posin sets up an interesting premise. I wish he had taken more chances. The movie never really raises the tension. This could be a highly emotional character study. Annette Bening is definitely a good enough actress to carry that out. This could be a case of obsession but it's not really. This could have been a lot of things but it never gets there. I kept thinking she could just tell him the truth. The movie could have moved to an even more compelling emotional landscape after Nikki comes clean with Tom. The movie feels stretched out as we wait for the inevitable reveal.
diogenes-858-449167 The Face of Love, a drama directed by Ari Posen, also appears to be a psychological thriller. It's successful in part, and it's compelling during its 92 minutes. Posen's choice of Annette Bening for Nikki Lostrom - a recent widow trying to pull the strings of her life back together - is inspired, and a performance worth the DVD price.Her intricate, emotional portrait as Nikki Lostrom allows the film a resonance it would, otherwise, never achieve. And this, not because the story and other actors aren't good. It is, and they are. The complex level of emotional states between characters is crucial to the film's narrative. The action is the familiar and mundane elements of their day to day life in LA. On this canvas Nikki's husband Garret/ Tom Young (Ed Harris), Roger Stillman (Robin Williams) and Nikki's daughter, Summer (nicely played by Jesse Weixler) are unwittingly drawn into circumstances Nikki faces, this woman whose grand personal deception damages each of their lives.The crux of Nikki's story - subtle emotional shifts in desiring to touch a world she'd known, allow our sitting on the edge of emotional catastrophes, and are a testament to Bening in her prime. She is so good at giving us access to simple and raw emotional information. And she's looking great on screen. Her ardent transparency in the close ups, is exquisite and unassuming. Here, Bening's fine art sensibility as an actress is on display. I remain averse to taking much Hollywood fare and personnel seriously. Hollywood studios do what they do well. And there's usually too much obvious punctuation in their symphony, too much starch and corn syrup in their product. As a piece of film making, The Face of Love gets the balance of these ingredients right - slices of contemporary American life without laboring on the familiar. Here, it uses those as a vehicle for an effecting emotional journey.This is where I found the rub. There are some films that I love Ed Harris in. He's a capable & experienced film actor. But he's not for the role of husband, Garret, in this story. He makes a decent fist of the role, but in one of the first shots of him from behind, while we're shown Bening gazing adoringly at him, the character captured on screen is his baldness. There's no other way around it. Yes, yes, scold me that ' Love is blind', and it may well be for Bening's character, but the audience aren't blind, nor in love with Garret. They see what's up there on the screen - a man, bald as a coot, barely as tall as Bening, who, despite convincing displays of sincerity and kindness, in no way physically meets the obsessive attachment projected throughout by Bening. If the act of your passing (death) is going to drive a woman into a spiral of longing so great that it warps the fabric of time, as in this story, then as that object of her longing, you need to show us the goods. Nikki, shown to us to be an exquisite, humane, capable, sensitive being in her own right is meant to have grown into utter union with this husband. We must see the beauty or uniqueness in him that attracted her. And it's right for us to believe that nothing or no one is ever to again come close to fulfilling that role in her life. Particularly not the simpering neighbor, Roger Stillman, played unlikeably well by the late Robin Williams.For all his experience, Ed Harris is not the leading man for this role. Physically, the pattern and nature of his baldness, in close up, is a character in its own right. That's not to disparage Mr Harris, but to state fact of its appearance on screen, and the power of it's distraction to this role. Harris' is a hard bitten face. It looks as if it's spent most of it's time being chiseled by the elements. Admire it as a wonder of creation, but topped with his immaculate baldness and lack of height, you have a mismatch for what the role needs. To surmount this distraction. Mr Harris needs to show us a truly affecting transparency in his character, as Bening does emphatically, for this story to work. We greatly need to see what makes him tick, and significantly, what it is about him that Bening totally surrenders into.At times, Mr Harris gestures toward finding that, but again, (and this is a director shortcoming) front, back and side, mid and close up shots of this severely bald man, amid being adored by his on screen wife, detract repeatedly, and are an anomaly. The Face of Love might have transcended script limitations and its occasional self conscious direction with a better choice of male lead. I do wonder where the script doctor was. A bit more attention to the process of script and story, this had the makings of a minor classic and an Academy nomination for Bening. Maybe getting things of this caliber made now in Hollywood is much harder. In any case, the film nearly breaks free of it's earthly bonds to morph into the stratosphere of thrilling possibility, and falls tantalisingly short. It is impressive. Despite not fulfilling it's thriller potential (Hitchcock would have LOVED this story) and my sigh of 'oh, what might have been' , I recognise it is something I will watch several more times, if only because Bening is so damned good.
grutmorg Despite the presence of Robin Williams in the cast, I decided to see this movie because of the lead actors - Ed Harris and Annette Bening, two performers who rarely disappoint. My bad. They just couldn't overcome the ridiculous premise of this story. I confess that I stuck with it because I am the eternal optimist and I knew there just had to be pony in here somewhere. No pony and no hope of a pony.I'm not a fan of romantic comedies, but with a little tweaking of this preposterous storyline "The Face of Love" might have made a decent light comedy. I kept waiting for some explanation, no matter how unlikely, that an exact replica of the Ed Harris character - same face; same age; same physique; same male-pattern baldness- could have appeared in the same So-Cal community. Something like identical twins separated at birth would have helped me to suspend disbelief. Not only is there no inquiry from the Bening character - there is no apparent interest. I'm giving this film a 2 just because it is such a welcome change to see romance on film between two middle-aged characters, but if middle-aged people are going to behave like this then never mind. Let's just stick to a tried and true mid-life crisis melodrama.