
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
Let's get the griping out of the way first, shall we?
Writer/director Mike Binder structures The Upside of Anger as a flashback, in
this case a gratuitous and leaden device which adds absolutely nothing to his film. His
second misjudgment is to use voiceovers both at the beginning and at the end, a totally
unnecessary distraction from the story he has to tell. His most grievous mistake is to
have the voiceover recite the moral of the tale at the end of the film, as if he lacked
confidence that he successfully had made his points within the body of the film or, worse,
he's not willing to trust the intelligence of his audience to have figured it out for
themselves.