A Real Island, Not Quite Realized

Meet the Rizzos.  There’s the dad, Vince (Andy Garcia), a prison guard who aspires to be an actor. There’s the frustrated mom, Joyce (Julianna Margulies), who has a dead-end desk job or else sits at home daydreaming.  Precocious son Vince Jr. (Ezra Miller) has a thing for obese women, and daughter Vivian (Dominik Garcia-Lorido, real-life daughter of Garcia) works as a stripper.   

   Oh, and everyone has a secret from everyone else.

   Into their lives comes a petty criminal, Tony (Steven Strait), who is Vince’s illegitimate offspring, and Molly (Emily Mortimer), Vince’s flirtatious pal from acting class.  Can you spell t-r-o-u-b-l-e?

   “City Island,â€� an indie comedy by newish writer/director Raymond De Felitta, is the latest entry into the “Junoâ€� “Little Miss Sunshineâ€� dysfunctional family sweepstakes. But unlike those movies, it lacks a breakout performance (Ellen Page in “Junoâ€�) or the over-the-top kookiness of “Miss Sunshineâ€�—although that film’s reigning king of quirkiness, Alan Arkin, does put in a brief and oddly muted appearance as Vince’s acting teacher.

   Above all — except for one very funny family dinner scene that, not coincidentally, perhaps, recalls the dinner table scene in “Miss Sunshineâ€� — “City Islandâ€� provides only about 20 percent of the minimum movie requirement of laughs from a comedy.

   There are perhaps a half-dozen clever conceits in “City Island.â€�  But as my grandmother might have said (but never did), clever conceits do not a movie make.

   Thus we get a kind of movie-within-a-movie, in which Vince’s family life gradually morphs into a farcical parody of a Scorsese film, even while he hopes to land a part in a Scorsese film; the joke of an intense actor (Garcia) playing a non actor who somewhat accidentally becomes an actor like himself; the ethereal Margulies going 180 degrees against type as a tough-talking harridan of a New York wife (most enjoyably, I should add); and the exotic blend of the kids’ eccentricities.

   The cast does good work across the board.  Garcia and Margulies bring charm and humor to their roles without going overboard into New Yorker caricatures.  Mortimer (who, again, perhaps not coincidentally, was working on Scorsese’s “Shutter Islandâ€� around the same time) manages to do an especially wonderful job of making you forget she’s a talented actress and not a struggling one, like her character.  And Miller is the real find here, with a perfectly measured sardonic delivery; he will be one to watch.

   So what’s not to like?

   Well, for one thing, the plot contrivances are unpersuasive. The Tony and Molly characters are dropped in needlessly to stir the story, and fit uneasily into it.

   And what about City Island itself?  (For those who don’t know, it really is an island, part of the Bronx, and beloved by many for its summertime lobster dinners. One imagines it is meant to be the other character in the movie, and we learn a few interesting things about it; for example, that lifelong islanders are called “clam diggers,â€� while relative interlopers are called “mussel suckers.â€�

   But truth be told, “City Islandâ€� could take place in Chicago or San Francisco. The setting doesn’t bring anything unique to the story.  Like Tony and Molly, the island’s character is wasted.

   More perceptive critics than I will no doubt find various geographic metaphors in coming/going, attachment/detachment, etc.—but seriously, why bother?  It’s supposed to be a comedy!

   In the end, “City Islandâ€� comes across as a promising but unsuccessful movie by a student director, much like its characters are student actors.  A little more practice and a lot more polish, and then maybe we’ll have something to talk about.

   “City Islandâ€� is rated PG-13 for sexual content, smoking and language.  It is playing at the Triplex in Great Barrington, MA.

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