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The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)
In Wes Anderson's eccentric dramatic comedy with an
ensemble cast - about three gifted siblings in the wealthy Tenenbaum
family in NYC who turned dysfunctional in their adult years:
- the opening introductory sequence (with off-screen
voice-over by Narrator (Alec Baldwin) who opened a book at various
chapters) - he spoke about the cast of characters in the Tenenbaum
family: comprised of three young children - siblings Margot (Irene
Gorovaia), Chas (Aram Aslanian-Persico), and Richie (Amedeo Turturro),
who were seated before their patriarchal father Royal Tenenbaum
(Gene Hackman); he announced to them an impending divorce between
himself and their mother Etheline "Ethel" Tenenbaum (Anjelica Huston)
- but it was never legalized; he separated and moved out to an
exclusive hotel (the Lindbergh Palace Hotel) while she raised the
children in their house - all geniuses
- Etheline wrote a book about their successes titled
"Family of Geniuses" -- Chas was a business, chemistry and math wizard
who made lots of money selling Dalmatian mice, while the adopted
Margot was a revered playwright, and Richie was an aspiring painter
and champion tennis pro; Richie's neighbor and best friend was
Eli Cash (James Fitzgerald), a future novelist
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Tenenbaum Children (l to r): Margot, Chas,
and Richie
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Royal Tenenbaum
(Gene Hackman)
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Etheline Tenenbaum (Anjelica Huston)
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- twenty-two years later, the Narrator noted how Royal's
unequal treatment of his children had led to their gifted declines:
"Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums had
been erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster"; Royal
- a prominent litigator who was disbarred in the mid-1980s (and imprisoned)
- was evicted from his luxury hotel room after 22 years
- in an impressive sequence, the major grown-up characters
were introduced - each with a medium close-up with name and cast
credits, engaged in some activity expressive of their character
22 Years Later
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Royal Tenenbaum
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Etheline Tenenbaum
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The Three Grown-Up Tenenbaum Children
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Chas (Ben Stiller)
with Two Sons
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Margot
(Gwyneth Paltrow)
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Richie
(Luke Wilson)
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- after a nervous breakdown and "Meltdown!", Richie
(Luke Wilson) had retired from pro tennis at age 26 and was cruising
by himself around the world; Richie admitted that he was secretly
in love with his own adopted sister, Margot, to his best friend -
English Lit. Ass't Prof. Eli
Cash (Owen Wilson); Eli had become a literary celebrity for his speculative
western novels
- the very secretive Margot
(Gwyneth Paltrow) had become a closeted chain-smoker (locked in her
bathroom for hours) and was in a mis-matched and loveless marriage
to elderly writer and neurologist Raleigh St. Clair (Bill Murray); Margot's
first marriage to a Jamaican recording artist had failed; she
kept a private studio in Mockingbird Heights under the assumed name
of 'Helen Scott'; suffering from writer's block,
Margot's last play was seven years earlier; her husband Raleigh was
conducting research and writing a book on Richie's friend Dudley Heinsbergen
(Stephen Lea Sheppard) who suffered from 'Heinsbergen Syndrome' ("a
rare disorder combining symptoms of amnesia, dyslexia and color blindness...")
- Chas (Ben Stiller) was mourning the loss of his wife
Rachael in a small plane crash the previous year (2000); he had become
an overprotective, safety-minded single father raising his two sons,
Ari (Grant Rosenmeyer) and Uzi (Jonah Meyerson) and their beagle
dog Buckley; they wore identical red track suits for every emergency;
meanwhile, the academic-minded Etheline had become an archaeologist
and was presented with a proposal of marriage by her long-time, love-struck
business manager-accountant friend Henry Sherman (Danny Glover)
- after learning from his longtime servant Pagoda (Kumar
Pallana) that Etheline had been proposed to by her black "two-bit chartered
accountant," Royal was disturbed by news of her infidelity and was
prejudiced against Henry (calling him a "big, old black buck"; he
became determined to win her affection and his family back via fraud
and deception; when evicted from his hotel, Royal manufactured the
false claim that he had developed terminal stomach
cancer; he met up with Etheline and requested
a favor: "I want to spend some time with you and the children...I want
my family back...Baby, I'm dyin'!...I'll be dead in six weeks"
- Etheline agreed to have increasingly-paranoid
Chas (and his two young sons) pack up and move back in with her;
severely depressed and "in a rut" Margot (involved in an affair
with Eli) also moved back and was in love with her own brother Richie,
Eli's best friend; Chas (still mistrusting of his father after many
years of favoritism toward "papa's boy" Richie, and takeover of his
funds from his safe deposit box when he was younger) was not interested
in having his two boys (grandsons) get to know his own father, although
they went on adventures together including cart-racing, horse-back
riding, water-balloon tossing, shoplifting, garbage-truck riding,
and dog-fight gambling
Various Love Affairs
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Margot in Love with Her Own Brother Richie
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Margo also with Eli
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Etheline with Henry Sherman
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- after moving back in, Royal set
up his medical monitoring equipment in Richie's room, and had his
friend Dusty (Seymour Cassel) employed at the Lindbergh
Palace Hotel pose as his doctor
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The 'Sickly' Royal
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Royal in a Sickbed in Richie's Room
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- Etheline's fiancee Henry Sherman (suspicious that
Royal wasn't really dying) confirmed that Royal had a bogus claim
about his cancer (there was no Colby General Hospital with a Dr.
McClure, he was eating greasy fast foods, and his prescription medication
was merely Tic Tac candy); as a result, Royal
(with Pagoda) was evicted from the house; as he left, he affirmed:
"The last six days have been the best six days of probably
my whole life" - they were forced to room together at the 375th Street
YMCA while employed as elevator operators at the Lindbergh Palace
Hotel
- meanwhile, Eli broke up with Margot over her two-timing,
"sick and gross" relationship with Richie; the jealous Raleigh (along
with Richie) hired a private detective to conduct surveillance on
Margot's unusual love life; to the tune of "Judy is a Punk" by the
Ramones, a montage illustrated the
results of the investigator's 'BACKGROUND FILE' on Margot and
confirmed her infidelities - her very shady past included a
heavy smoking addiction at age 12, her escape
from boarding school at age 14, a nine-day
marriage in Jamaica at age 19, a lesbian affair with a Parisian girl
(Tatiana Abbey) at age 21, a publicity tour at age 24, and
a number of instances of sexual promiscuity with numerous lovers
in New York, including Eli at age 32; Raleigh's simple reaction was:
"She smokes?"
- to the tune of Elliott Smith's "Needle in the
Hay," the scene of the suicide of Richie
who was in pain over his obsessive love for Margot and her secret history;
he entered into a locked bathroom where he methodically shaved off
his beard and long hair (grown after he quit tennis), and then calmly
attempted to take his own life by slashing his wrists with the blade
from his razor
Attempted Suicide of Richie
Over His Obsessive Love
for Margot
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- after Richie's bloody body was discovered on the
floor of the bathroom by Dudley,
Richie was rushed to a hospital on a stretcher and rapidly
survived his bungled suicide; Raleigh accused Margot of being unfaithful
("You've made a cuckold of me...many times over") and causing Richie's
death wish: ("And you nearly killed your poor brother...she's balling
Eli Cash"); shortly later, Richie escaped from the hospital,
took a Green Line bus back home, climbed the fire escape to his room
(all to the tune of Nick Drake's "Fly"), and found Margot there in
his private yellow tent listening to phonograph records - they shared
their secret love and kissed to the tune of the Rolling Stones' "She
Smiled Sweetly" and "Ruby Tuesday"; he admitted he had tried to kill
himself due to her, but it wasn't her fault: "Yeah, but it's not
your fault"; she told him: 'I think we're just gonna have to be
secretly in love with each other and leave it at that, Richie"
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Margot and Richie Reconciled and In Love
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- as the film was approaching its conclusion, Royal
gave his wife the official divorce she had always wanted; during preparations
for the wedding day of Etheline and Henry, crazed, drug-addicted,
war-paint-wearing Eli lost control and crashed his car into the front
of the house, and nearly hit Chas' two boys Ari and Uzi (but killed
Buckley); incensed by the catastrophe, Chas chased and wrestled with
Eli throughout the house, until they both fell exhausted next to
each other and admitted they needed psychiatric help (Eli: "I need
help" Chas: "So do I"); the presiding Father Petersen (Philip Denning)
was taken away in an ambulance with a broken ankle; Royal bought
the boys a Dalmatian replacement dog (named Spark Plug) from a responding
firefighter, and apologized to Chas ("Sorry I let you down, Chas.
All of you. I been trying to make it up to you"); Chas teared up:
"I've had a rough year, Dad"; and two days later, the interrupted
marriage between Etheline and Henry was formalized before a judge
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Crazed Eli
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Crashed Car at Front of House
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Chas and Eli - Exhausted and Needing Help
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A New Dog for Chas' Boys, to Replace Buckley
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- the resolution of the lives of different family members,
including Royal's attempts to make amends and reconcile, included
the following:
- Margot: published a new play ("The Levinsons in the Trees") based
upon her family (with the alias name the Levinsons), that was presented
at the Cavendish Theatre for two weeks, with mixed reviews
- Raleigh and Dudley: promoted "their new book" DUDLEY'S
WORLD on a lecture tour to eleven universities
- Eli: entered a drug rehab facility in North Dakota for treatment
- Richie: became a teacher in a pre-teen tennis program for boys at
the 375th Street Y
- Chas: became more relaxed and began riding on the back of garbage
trucks with Royal and his boys
- in the final moments of the film, Royal suffered a
fatal heart attack at age 68, and died on the way to the hospital with
Chas the only one in the ambulance to be with him; at Royal's funeral
held at dusk, the fanciful epitaph on his tombstone read: "1932-2001
- Died tragically rescuing his family from the wreckage of a destroyed
sinking battleship"; family members filed away in slow-motion from
the gravesite, to the tune of Van Morrison's "Everyone"
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The Tenenbaums: "Family of Geniuses"
Royal On an Outing with Young Richie
Richie's Best Friend Eli Cash
22 Years Later:
Raleigh St. Clair (Bill Murray) - Margot's Estranged Husband
Henry Sherman (Danny Glover) - Etheline's Accountant
Eli Cash
(Owen Wilson)
Royal Evicted From the Lindbergh Palace Hotel
Pagoda (Kumar Pallana) - Royal's Servant
Royal to Etheline: "I'll be dead in six weeks"
Margot with Richie
Strained Relationship Between Chas (and Two Sons) and
His Father Royal
Friends Eli and Richie
Margot Estranged From Suspicious Husband Raleigh
Adventures with Grandpa: Shoplifting and Garbage-Truck Riding
Henry Confronting Royal About His Bogus Claim of Cancer
Private Investigator - Looking into Margot's Life
Part of A Montage of Margot's Uncovered Shady Past - A Lesbian Affair
The Tenenbaum Divorce Made Official
Henry and Etheline's Marriage
Chas with His Father Royal When He Died in Ambulance
Royal's Tombstone Epitaph
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