American Beauty Review

The first time I saw American Beauty it was the last in three consecutive weekend movie run. The other two films were Fight Club and Bringing Out the Dead. All three films are about men trying to come to terms to what it means to be a man in America in this day and age. Fight Club finds meaning in deconstructing everything down to base needs, feeling through pain. Bringing Out the Dead gives meaning to its character through drug use, but is was in American Beauty that I found some sense of hope.

In the film, Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey) plays a middle aged, middle class suburbanite, with seemingly everything he could desire. He has a good, well paying job; a beautiful wife (Annette Bening); a large luxurious house; and a lovely daughter (Thora Birch). Yet, with all of this he is not happy. In fact, all of these things are not quite what they seem. His employer is facing cut backs, and he may soon lose his job. He marriage is in shambles, and his daughter openly hates him. Early, we see him masturbating in the shower, in narration; he states this is the highpoint of his day. All is not well in the house of Burnham.

All of this changes when Lester meets Angela (Mena Suvari), his daughter, Jane’s gorgeous, cheerleader friend. On first seeing Angela during a cheer routine, Lester feel a special, lustful connection. Later that night, Lester overhears Angela playfully tell Jane that if he would only work out, he would be sexy. His lust over this teenage vixen becomes the catalyst for the film and Lester’s very life.

Soon after Lester quits his job, in fact he bilks the company for a year’s salary by threatening to disclose scandalous information that he has become privy to. He begins smoking pot, buys a hot rod.. He plays with remote control cars, takes a job at a fast food joint, and of course does start working out. In every way he reverts back to his teenage years. Even the soundtrack begins blaring out classic rock tunes from the 1970’s. Finally after years, decades even, of feeling low, miserable, not alive, he feels great.

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Article Author: Mat Brewster

Mat Brewster is a periodic ex-pat wondering if he'll ever find a home. You can find him musing on pop culture, and obsessing over concert bootlegs at The Midnight Cafe.

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  • American Beauty (Widescreen Edition) American Beauty (Widescreen Edition)

    When you've got nothing to lose, you might as well risk everything. Lester Burnham is in a rut. Facing a midlife crisis, lester reverts into a maddening rebirth of adolescence. His sudden, irreverant ...

  • Fight Club (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) Fight Club (Two-Disc Collector's Edition)
  • Bringing Out the Dead Bringing Out the Dead

Article comments

  • 1 - Quack Corleone

    Apr 08, 2005 at 3:42 am

    I'm not a fan of 'American Beauty', yet I've seen it more times than films I consider to be far better. So there's something in it that I can't quite figure out. There are the little things, like the acting (which you pointed out), and the score and the visual style. But I think you nail the major elusive quality in your first paragraph. 'American Beauty', despite being so much about death, is full of hope. Lester even dies in, what I presume is, a state of happiness and understanding. Maybe that's what keeps me coming back. (But I still donut like the film!)

    Aside from all that, good review. Your analysis seems so effortless and fluid. I agree about the Colonal, too. His character detracts and distracts from the film.

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 08, 2005 at 9:02 am

    very nice Mat, I agree with Quack and you that on paper this should be jsut about everything I dislike in a movie, but it casts a spell. Great point about the oddness of hope as prevaling mood in a tale of such perverse bleakness

  • 3 - Phillip Winn

    Apr 08, 2005 at 9:21 am

    COunt me in. I bought the DVD, even though I consider much of the film to be completely superficial and falsely stereotypical. It may be crap, but it's really well-made and engaging crap.

  • 4 - Mat

    Apr 08, 2005 at 10:29 am

    Thanks folks. What I didn't mention in the review was that at the time of watching it I myself was going through a "who am I/what is my place in the world" phase. The three films mentioned seemed to be talking directly to me. Where Fight Club nailed me right in the solar plexus, American Beauty offered some hope to finding beauty in this life.

    Watching it again, it doesn't seem quite so life changing, and much of it seems, well false, but it was still thoroughly engaging, and enjoyable.

  • 5 - Audrey

    Oct 23, 2006 at 4:42 pm

    I found this movie amazing in content, concept, and bold defiance for all that is politically correct. As a teenager, my future looming over me, as well as all the expectations for excellence, it is refreshing to see a movie about all things going to hell, and yet someone managing to find their own personal emotional oasis in the midst of a desert of chaos once again.

    As a recovered victim of depression and suicidal tendancies, it is also wonderfull to see such a fresh outlook on life and death. Many times throughout my existence I have pondered the two states of being, the various views, and which state is desireable over the other. I was not so much happy to hear the view of Lester Burnham, however, I am a strong believer in gray matter, and it only seems just that even in death, there be no black and white.

    Yes, none of the behaviors were healthy, or beneficial to anyone, long-term. However, to see someone break out of the shell society so cruelly sets around us, and cut loose, and take what THEY want to learn from it instead of what everyone else tells them to, is refreshing, and in ways bitter-sweet.

  • 6 - Mat Brewster

    Oct 23, 2006 at 6:30 pm

    Thanks for your comment Audrey. The first time I saw the movie I would have agreed with you heartily. I was in a kind of personal funk myself, and it was refreshing to see people doing what they wanted.

    Its just seeing it a second time I was in a much better position in life and the selfishness in some of the characters actions stood out a little more.

  • 7 - Danielle

    Sep 01, 2007 at 11:56 pm

    This movie is amazing.
    I don't think it's crap at all..I think it makes perfect sense.

    It is real, and not sterotypical. I've seen it with my own eyes.

    I don't know how anyone could not like this movie..the bird scene, the bag scene, and the end scene are just..they are so beautiful.

  • 8 - Marothi Kalushi

    Dec 19, 2008 at 8:19 am

    Simply brilliant, I saw this movie on TV while flipping through the channels. I'd never heard about it before so you can imagine how I was absolutely floored by this movies unmitigated fondling of human emotions. The opening scene looked like this was one of those feel good movies that leave you feeling good but are often so cliche it hurts (I was hooked even before we got into the Burnham household because it looked like my type of movie). BUT not American beauty, this is a stereotypical yet unpredictable tale of life that leaves you satisfied but at the same time like theres something wrong with something... somewhere but you don't know what or where it is because it can't be the movie because this movie is simply brilliant.

  • 9 - rk

    Jan 25, 2009 at 3:35 am

    I heard this title to be one of among the few must watch movies. But, when I finally saw this movie I only felt a very disturbed feeling. I allocate the failure to the story itself. I think a director has some responsibility in this society interms of a possible change frm bad to good in audience, een it may not happen. I am afraid that a teenager may watch this film and feel that he should use drugs to see the beauty of this life and elope with his girlfriend to NY if kicked out from his house. My 2 cents to the film.

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