HOME
Archives A - E      F - N    O - Z     Posters          Who We Are and Why We Do What We Do

Your Donations support the Site

amazon.gif
Top Selling DVD     Books

  BLU-RAY DVDs:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Happy Feet Two
Footloose (2011)
Tower Heist
Angels and Demons
The Rum Diary
Avatar
Batman Begins
Dark Knight
Fifth Element
The Hangover
James Bond 11 disc coll.
Lord of the Rings
trilogy
Mission Impossible GP
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Star Wars Saga
Ultimate Matrix coll
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Wolverine

 BLU-Ray for Family DVDs 
Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Bambi
A Bug's Life
Cars
Chronicles of Narnia set
Coraline
Ghostbusters
Harry Potter 1-8 collection
Iron Man 2 combo
Kung Fu Panda
Lord of the Rings Trilogy Pinocchio
Pirates of Caribbean trilogy
Pixar short films
Ratatouille
Shrek the Whole Story
Sleeping Beauty
The Smurfs
combo
Snow White & 7 Dwarfs
Star Trek motion pictures set
Star Wars Saga (1-6)
Toy Story combo
Toy Story 2 combo
Toy Story 3 combo
Wall-E SE

Labelled with ICRA
We're Kidlet Safe

Search engine by FreeFind
Click to add search to YOUR web site!
click to search site

DVDs on Sale:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Hop
Footloose (2011)
Hugo
Tower Heist
Jack and Jill
Tower Heist
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
The Three Musketeers
J. Edgar combo
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows combo
My Week With Marilyn
Abduction
Contraband
The Iron Lady
Angels Demons,
Joyful Noise
The Rum Diary
The Bodyguard
Moneyball
Adjustment Bureau
Avatar
Batman Begins
Blade Runner
Harry Potter 1-8 box set
The Help
Indiana Jones trilogy
Jurassic Park box set
Mission Impossible GP
Rango combo
Shrek 1-3 trilogy
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Simpsons Movie
Star Trek I - VI box set
Star Trek 2010 (1 disk)
Star Wars Trilogy (1-3)
Star Wars Trilogy (4-6)
Thor
Transformers Dark Moon
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Buy Movie collectibles
TV/Movie Collectibles

movie review query engine

Privacy Policy

OFCS


Click for full size poster

Mumford

Starring Hope Davis, Loren Dean, Jason Lee, Mary McDonnell, David Paymer, Martin Short, Ted Danson, Pruitt Taylor Vince and Alfre Woodard
Written and Directed by Lawrence Kasdan
website: www.mumford-themovie.com

IN SHORT: A gentle, genial comedy for post teens. [Rated [R] , 101 minutes]

Consider the story of Dr. Michael Mumford, Ph.D (Loren Dean). He's the new shrink in a town also named Mumford whose two other shrinks (one a real doctor, one a fake) have seen their formerly robust practices shrivel. The town also has a self-absorbed, ego-maniacal attorney named Lionel Dillard (Martin Short), one of the few people willing and able to pay the new doc cold hard cash for an hour of mental deconstruction, whose patronage is refused ('cuz Doc Mumford can't stand jerks -- a more colorful epithet is used, several times by different characters in Mumford but I've got standards to uphold and parents that would complain if I used the "a" word. So I won't). Lessee, one spurned lawyer. Two headcases with shrinking practices. Add 'em all up and . . . can we spell "revenge"?

Oh, let's not and say we did. The characters, and the problems, that writer director Lawrence Kasdan has created are entirely ordinary and normal. Given that this story revolves around a psychologist, that means a lot of talk. A lot of ordinary and normal talk would be hailed as "realistic" on the arthouse circuit, but would strike most folk as tedious -- unless the writer knew exactly what he was doing, which Kasdan does (as he has demonstrated both solo and with partners in The Big Chill and The Accidental Tourist and a couple of action flicks called Raiders of the Lost Ark and Star Wars episodes Five and Six). It's a great talent to find interesting things among average people and while there is a twist or two towards the unusual, the problems of the people found here are normal.

Formerly a logging town, Mumford is now dependent on Panda Modems, run by the richest man in town, Skip Skipperton (Jason Lee). Being the sole provider for a town of several thousand yields an problem for Skip. He can't be seen with a shrink, 'cuz that appearance problem would cause trouble for the company and the town. So he hires Mumford to be his "friend," to discuss intimacy problems -- Skip needs a companion more interesting than the body parts he's working on down in the lab. You'll discover the secret of that in the flick.

As for the other customers, there's a fat pharmacist (Pruitt Taylor Vince) who lost his wife and family due to fantasies straight out of a Raymond Chandler novel; a wife (Mary McDonnell) who catalog shops incessantly as a way of compensating for the lack of husbandly attention (Ted Danson is the louse); the divorcee with chronic fatigue syndrome (Hope Davis) who makes the doctor's heart go all thumpa thumpa and whose nasty old witch of a mom (Dana Ivey) hates the doc from the word go.

All of the dirt about the good doctor's patients can be had straight from the horse's mouth, if you ask him the right question at the right time. Which is what local cafe owner Lily (Alfre Woodard, in a role that marks her as the sanest person in town) manages to do right at the top of the flick. What's that you say? A doctor is supposed to keep those clinical confessions to himself? Absolutely correct a mundo.

But, as we know from the television commercial, Dr. Mumford ain't no doc. Not even a little. Only Robert Stack can help sort out the unsolved mystery of who Michael Mumford really is, and getting there is a very pleasant ride where the law is savagely broken and a town is fully healed.

Sorry about that. Kasdan writes well. I get inspired. Shame on me. Mumford is a cut above your average grown up dateflick. It may be a tad too nice for those Crankier than I -- Martin Short's character is as close to an "edge" as the script gets, and that's not much. Mumford offers a fine time in the dark and is recommended.

On average, a first run movie ticket will run you Eight Bucks. Were Cranky able to set his own price to Mumford, he would have paid...

$6.00

This one's definitely for us grownups (cuz Cranky at 15 would've been bored silly by all the talk. We didn't appreciate things like character back in them halcyon days of pimplehood)

Click to buy films by Lawrence Kasdan
Click to buy films starring Loren Dean
Click to buy films starring Ted Danson

The Cranky Critic® is a Registered Trademark of, and his website is  Copyright © 1995  -  2012 by Chuck Schwartz. Articles by Paul Fischer are Copyright © 1999 - 2006 Paul Fischer. All images, unless otherwise noted, are property of,©, ®, their respective studios and are used by permission. All Rights Reserved. Not to be used or copied for any commercial purpose. Academy Award(s) and Oscar®(s) are registered trademarks and service marks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.