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It doesn’t take a scientific study to prove the effects that music can have on listeners. All it takes is a powerful film score—or the energizing music at a sporting event—to understand that music can whip a crowd into a frenzy or soothe a troubled child or bring focus on a busy day. But in Coda, a musician looks outside his music to find peace.
Coda stars Patrick Stewart as Henry Cole, a world-famous pianist whose struggle with grief and loss has led to a debilitating case of stage fright. After years of locking himself away, refusing to perform, he’s finally returning to the stage, though his fear of playing in front of a crowd that he believes watches him solely because of the looming disaster makes it difficult for him to move forward. But then he meets Helen Morrison (Katie Holmes), a journalist and former pianist who sees his fear and helps him move beyond it.
With its classical score, its noteworthy cast, and its dramatic story of loss and depression and renewal, this musical drama certainly seems like a strange release for the Movie Dead Zone of January. In fact, it seems more like an Award Season release: the kind of film that audiences would find moving and powerful.
Unfortunately, though, Coda fails to live up to that Award Season level of success. That’s not to say that it doesn’t have its highlights and its moving moments. Patrick Stewart is undeniably charming as the gifted musician who finds himself lost in the grief and loneliness that has led to the kind of fear that could end his career. But the character keeps his emotions so closed off that it isn’t always easy to connect with him.
Katie Holmes, meanwhile, seems completely out of place in her role. Not only may the stars’ 38-year age difference give viewers an uneasy feeling as the characters’ business relationship turns into a friendship that starts to hint at more, but Holmes seems to be trying to play the role even younger. She smiles too much, tries too hard to be girlish. And the result is a relationship that feels about as authentic and natural as Holmes’s ill-fated marriage to Tom Cruise—made even more perplexing by her awkward narration.
The lesson to be learned here is that, when a film that seems like an Award Season drama skips over the season and shows up in January, there’s most likely a very good reason for the release date. Coda may have a charming star and a beautiful classical score, but its overall awkwardness places it firmly in its Movie Dead Zone release date.
Listen to the review on Reel Discovery:
Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.
Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.
As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).
Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.
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Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.
Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.
As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).
Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.