The Intern opens
and closes with Robert De Niro doing Yoga, as if writer-director Nancy Myers
dreamed up this image first, and then wrote a whole script around it. The Intern is destined to be a hit with
the over-50 crowd, and while the film doesn’t pander to them quite as much as I
thought it would, it is at times astonishingly dull. But it hits all the right beats
of its ready-made formula, and after the movie’s two meandering hours have
finally passed, viewers may feel that the quantity has given them their money’s
worth, even if the quality is bland and overly expository.
Here’s the set-up: Robert De Niro plays Ben, a retired ad
exec who applies for a senior internship (meaning an internship for senior
citizens) at an up-and-coming online apparel outlet, founded and operated by a
frantic, driven, smart young woman named Jules Ostin (Anne Hathaway). Jules is
a modern woman: She started this company only a year-and-a-half ago, and it’s
grown to 200 employees and booming business. Her husband (played by Anders
Holm) is a stay-at-home dad. (With his patchy manscaping, Holm looks like a boy
who’s donned a thick prop beard to play dress-up in.) Jules is so
under-developed that we have no idea she’s married (or has a child) for the
first half-hour of the film. (This could be a poorly conceived attempt to show
us that Jules is working too hard and therefore her family is invisible to
her.) Ben becomes Jules’s assistant, and we watch as he gradually wins her over
with his wise gentlemanly ways. There are the expected jokes about the clash
between young and old, but even though this movie doesn’t hit them too too hard, it smacks of staleness.
There’s even a scene in which Hathaway helps De Niro set up his Facebook
account. Will this even matter in ten years, assuming Facebook goes the way of
Myspace by then?
Nancy Myers, a veteran writer-director, has not shaped The Intern into anything sharp or alive.
The movie lumbers along, and we’re all waiting to get to the part where De Niro
and Hathaway become friends. We want to see them interact. Nancy Myers wants
this too, but she makes us wait nearly an hour as Jules goes through the
motions of resisting Ben. We all know what’s going to happen, so this device
does nothing for the film but pad the running time.
De Niro rarely rises above his abysmal fate playing a
friendly, wise, oddly progressive Grandpa-Santa Claus-type, doling out obvious
life advice—like telling his youthful co-workers they should tuck their shirts
in. De Niro is likable, but he smiles his way through the film, like some big
dumb grinning cartoon character, with no sense of direction. The movie
desperately wants him not to be the
crotchety hard-ass he played in Meet the
Parents, but it swings so far in the other direction that he becomes
passive. Anne Hathaway gets to be funnier and more defined, but by the time we
arrived at those moments in the second half of the film, my patience had worn
thin.
For all its attempts at clever commentary on the cultural
divide between young and old people, The
Intern isn’t very funny. Nancy Myers gets so caught up in grinding us
through the formula of her story that she forgets to make it amusing. She
relies entirely on her actors’ individual charisma and charm, like when Adam
Devine (one of the goofy young employees, who’s like Speedy Gonzalez with his delightful
maniacal ridiculousness) is rapping in the getaway car while De Niro and two
others break into Jules’s mother’s house to delete a nasty email Jules
accidentally sent to her mom. De Niro has been coaching Devine’s character
about how to interact with women, and gives him more obvious advice: A text
message is not a suitable venue for an apology. Adam Devine could make me laugh
in almost anything, though, so his presence here comes as a relief.
Perhaps the biggest crime The Intern commits is its wasting of Rene Russo, who plays the
company’s in-house massage therapist. She and De Niro’s character strike up a
romance pretty quickly, but the film barely pursues it. We get one brief scene
of them talking about their former spouses and their lives, and that’s it. The
rest of the time, Russo’s character is either coming or going, saying things like
“I’m just on my way to work.” (A far cry from the delicious part she had in
last year’s Nightcrawler.)
You’d think Myers would have been drawn into this
relationship, that she’d have wanted to develop it more fully. Perhaps her
characters are so dull, so pat, and so predictable, that the only direction it can go is banal perfection.
That’s the real problem with The Intern: It essentially argues that old people have figured
everything out, and along the way, it robs them of any interesting qualities.
The young people in The Intern have
all the problems, and the old people are there to solve them—or else get in the
way with their cartoonish ineptness, like one of the other senior interns does
when she attempts to serve as Hathaway’s chauffeur. This movie is the cinematic
equivalent to all those shame-inducing think pieces dumping on the “millennial”
generation by espousing the inherent superiority of the baby boomers. Myers
hasn’t developed her thinking very much in the last thirty years. In fact, she
was more honest in 1987’s Baby Boom.
Anne Hathaway is the reason to see this picture, if at all.
Her performance as Jules Ostin is terrific. It’s a pretty standard Hathaway
part: driven, smart, plucky, tough, and just a tad prickly. Obviously, De
Niro’s character exists only to smooth over her rough edges. But the film finds
itself in a quandary when [spoiler alert] Jules discovers her husband [spoiler]
is cheating on her. There’s a lot of talk that Jules is somehow guilty for her
husband’s cheating ways, because she’s too focused on work. But De Niro
discourages this self-doubt, and reminds her that it’s okay to be a woman with
ambitions. Somehow, this felt like a characterological flaw. De Niro’s Ben
isn’t so much a human being as a Frankenstein-concoction: the ideal man, created by a politically progressive but
cinematically conventional filmmaker. And as much as The Intern tries to be progressively feminist, it settles for a
treacly happy ending, one that cheats its convictions.
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