Relationship study is filmmaker's forte

Fiona (Rene Russo) consults with the new guy, 70-year-old widower Ben (Robert De Niro), while co-workers Jason (Adam DeVine) and Davis (Zack Pearlman) look on in Nancy Meyers’ new workplace comedy, The Intern.
Fiona (Rene Russo) consults with the new guy, 70-year-old widower Ben (Robert De Niro), while co-workers Jason (Adam DeVine) and Davis (Zack Pearlman) look on in Nancy Meyers’ new workplace comedy, The Intern.

It was a line of dialogue that provoked volcanic laughter, echoed through bedrooms for a decade or two, and announced a distinctive comic voice.

The line was: "Now I know what I've been faking all these years," purred by an afterglowy Goldie Hawn to a dreamboaty Armand Assante in Private Benjamin (1980). In the film's Oscar-nominated screenplay by Nancy Meyers, Charles Shyer and Harvey Miller, Hawn played a sheltered 29-year-old "trained to do nothing" and surprised by her own competence in the Army. The line in Meyers' screenwriting debut represented the first time in my moviegoing experience that women in the audience laughed louder than the men.

The film likewise represented the beginning of what the filmmaker, James L. Brooks, called Meyers' "trailblazing," zeitgeist-tapping and frequently uproarious chronicles of men and women at work and in love, films she directed that paved the way for movies like Trainwreck. Over a 35-year career, Meyers, now 65 and the mother of two grown daughters, has charted evolving office protocols in Baby Boom (1987) and romantic entanglements in Something's Gotta Give (2003). She has reconsidered the old rules of marital disengagement in It's Complicated (2009), and now the new rules of e-tailing engagement in The Intern.

The Intern is set in Brooklyn and stars Anne Hathaway as Jules, the proprietor of a fashion website with its headquarters in a converted factory. The title character is Robert De Niro's Ben, a retiree and Everyman. Though assigned to Jules as a trainee, Ben quickly proves himself a patient sounding board, confidant and father surrogate for the harried executive and her employees, most in their 20s and 30s.

Since 1997, when, at 48, Meyers made her directorial debut on The Parent Trap, she has helmed five films that have grossed, in all, more than $1 billion worldwide. "You don't expect to see romantic comedies post the grosses of superhero movies, but Nancy Meyers has done just that," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Rentrak.

"Nancy has consistency," said Brooks, the Oscar-winning director. "She cares about the people she writes about."

In her movies, one can measure the distance real women have traveled professionally. "I didn't consciously set out to chronicle social trends; it just happened," Meyers said. In Baby Boom, Diane Keaton works for a management agency run by a man who won't promote women with children; in What Women Want (2000), Helen Hunt is the creative director at an ad agency, and Mel Gibson reports to her; and in The Intern, Hathaway, a married mom, has founded a start-up.

Typically, Meyers is a beat or two ahead of the pack, said Anne Thompson, who writes about the film industry on her blog, Thompson on Hollywood. In Baby Boom, with its slapstick picture of the female executive juggling briefcase and infant, Meyers comically showed how working women with children get sidelined. The film illustrated the Mommy Track two years before The New York Times, in a story about Felice Schwartz's article about women in the workforce, named the phenomenon. Similarly, 14 years before "femvertising" entered the parlance of Madison Avenue, Meyers found humor and poignancy in marketing running shoes to empower female consumers in What Women Want.

Meyers' ability to be on-trend, Brooks said, wouldn't matter "unless Nancy could see the joke and get the laugh." In 1997, he was visiting the set of The Parent Trap when she was shooting the scene in which two look-alike girls previously unknown to each other take out torn snapshots. Suddenly the partial pictures of one's mother and the other's father become an intact portrait of their common parents. "I couldn't help but see it as a metaphor of Nancy's career," Brooks said, "puzzle pieces suddenly fitting together to reveal the bigger picture."

Although her movies have classical framing, editing and storytelling, where most filmmakers would use a reverse angle to show how characters look at each other, Meyers has her own signature: the side-by-side shot of a man and a woman on a bed, seen from the ceiling.

Although she has the safety net of the storyboard, Meyers takes additional footage so as to have more options in postproduction. "I made a choice in the editing room to stay on De Niro as he listens in conversations with Hathaway," she said. "His is a quiet, unshowy part; his acting is very nuanced." The surprising result, lightly comic in the manner of Jack Lemmon, is a character unlike any that the actor, now 72, has played before.

A subtext of Meyers' movies is how she casts a man's man -- Mel Gibson, Jack Nicholson, Alec Baldwin -- as a character who learns to listen to women. The modest proposal behind The Intern is that for men and women, the sexiest thing in the world is to be heard.

MovieStyle on 09/25/2015

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