More often than not, this would be shot by the father, or designated "budding filmmaker," assigned to capture particular moments of the family - whether on holiday or during special occasions.
Cousins adrift: A review of 'A Real Pain'
At a glance
Before the advent of social media and the phenomenon of everyone being their content creator, there was such a thing as "home movies." More often than not, this would be shot by the father, or designated ‘budding filmmaker,’ assigned to capture particular moments of the family - whether on holiday or during special occasions. I was reminded of home movies as I watched A Real Pain, as essentially it’s a chronicling of a trip to Poland by two cousins from the US East Coast. It’s a trip made to honor their late grandmother, who was a World War II concentration camp survivor before emigrating to America.
The film opens in cinemas this Jan. 29 and arrives with something of a buzz, as co-star Kieran Culkin was picked by the Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor statuette for his performance here. And by all accounts, he is now an odds-on favorite to romp away with more trophies in the coming film awards season. Let’s study why this is so later in the review.
David Kaplan (Jesse Eisenberg, who also directs and wrote this film) and cousin Benji (Kieran Culkin) meet at a New York airport to join a tour group in Poland and to visit their grandmother’s hometown. From the start, we see how these cousins are severely mismatched; they were very close as young boys and grew up together, but their personalities are on opposite ends of the spectrum.
They’re both neurotic but in markedly different ways. David is super-efficient and anal, painfully shy around people, and a constant worrier. Meanwhile, Benji seems more outgoing and gregarious on the surface, easy with people, and acts like an inquisitive open book. But it’s more a front than anything else, as he was much closer to the grandmother and has issues with depression and bouts of self-harm. It’s two sides of the same neurotic calling card, and they’re utterly hopeless together.
When they get to Poland, they join a group led by James (Will Sharp). Those into movie trivia will love to note that in the group is a single mature woman, Marcia (Jennifer Grey). Jennifer Grey was the other lead star in Dirty Dancing, playing opposite Patrick Swayze.
The film is wonderfully written, funny, compassionate, sad, moving, and wise. While it could be said that both David and Benji are characters we’d be very impatient with in real life, it’s fascinating to watch the two, as they’re both so real, and we are bound to have friends who share some of the attributes of the two.
As for Kieran and the Best Supporting Actor race, it’s a Hollywood love match, a sidebar story that’s quite irresistible. He’s not Macaulay, so Kieran was labeled the other brother and often overlooked. He’s had a sporadic Hollywood career but picked up impressive notices for his recent work in television, the Succession series. Like with Demi Moore, this will be seen as something of a comeback, a resilience narrative, and Hollywood loves to welcome back these individuals. Plus, it is a wonderful portrayal! Watch this film and appreciate why this very simple film works so well.