★★★★½ (Masterpiece)
It is Wes Anderson’s Kramer vs. Kramer if it were directed by J.D. Salinger. A perfect, poignant, beautifully damaged family portrait. As Royal says on his (actual) deathbed: “It’s been a tough year.” For the Tenenbaums, every year is tough. But they have each other. And that’s a hell of a thing. royal tenenbaums
The music, too, is iconic. From the haunting strums of Nico’s “These Days” accompanying Margot’s disembarkation from a bus (the famous slow-motion “needle drop”) to Elliott Smith’s melancholic “Needle in the Hay” during Richie’s suicide attempt, the soundtrack functions as an internal monologue the characters are too repressed to speak. The film’s axis is Royal Tenenbaum. Hackman, in a career-best comedic performance, plays him as a man of infinite charm and zero responsibility. He steals a dog, lies about his medical history, and tries to buy his son’s affection with a stolen bird. Yet, Hackman finds the glimmers of a broken father who, in his own twisted way, realizes he wasted his chance. When he finally tells Chas, “I’ve had a rough year, dad,” and Royal softly replies, “I know you have, Chasie,” it is a moment of such earned, quiet catharsis that it shatters the film’s ironic veneer. Themes: Failure, Adoption, and The Second Act The Royal Tenenbaums is not about success; it is about the failure that follows it. Every prodigy has burned out. The film suggests that genius is a childhood condition, and adulthood is the long, humiliating process of becoming ordinary. The only cure for this despair is family—not the ideal family, but the messy, broken, infuriating one you have. A perfect, poignant, beautifully damaged family portrait
The subplot of Margot’s adoption is crucial. The Tenenbaums are a family held together not by blood, but by choice. When Richie declares his love for Margot (“I know you’re adopted. I didn’t know you were a lesbian.”) and they share a quiet moment in a tent pitched in the living room, Anderson argues that love within a family is no less real for being unconventional. The Royal Tenenbaums was a box office moderate success but a cultural earthquake. It popularized the “Anderson aesthetic” that would influence indie film, fashion (the Fendi fur coat, the Lacoste tennis dress), and even interior design for decades. More importantly, it proved that a film could be both achingly sad and riotously funny; that a man in a velour jumpsuit could break your heart. And that’s a hell of a thing