Daddio (2024)

Direction: Christy Hall
Country: USA

Christy Hall's feature debut, Daddio, is a lackluster two-character drama that desperately seeks attention but fails to capture any. Set during a long cab ride from JFK airport to midtown Manhattan, the film—originally conceived as a stage play—stars Sean Penn as a chatty, self-important cab driver and Dakota Johnson as his passenger, a seemingly confident yet emotionally fragile woman returning to New York after visiting her estranged half-sister in Oklahoma. 

Visually dull and conversationally uninspired, Daddio lacks depth, maturity, and emotional resonance. The dialogue, filled with shallow confessions, unearned conclusions, and awkward laughs, does little to develop the characters beyond superficial traits. Penn's occasional watery eyes never feel authentic, and it's hard to believe Johnson's forced nonchalance and sudden curiosity about a stranger who seems to read and understand her. 

At its core, Daddio is void of any spark or substance. The film trudges along without ever offering anything fresh or meaningful, leaving the audience to wonder: why should we care? It feels like watching paint dry—only less captivating. 

Flag Day (2021)

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Direction: Sean Penn
Country: USA

Melodramatic and threadbare, Flag Day is another calamitous misstep (following the unbearable The Last Face) from actor/director Sean Penn, who stars here alongside his daughter Dylan. He follows a script by the brothers Jez and John-Henry Butterworth (they also wrote Fair Game, Edge of Tomorrow and Ford vs. Ferrari), which was based on Jennifer Vogel’s 2005 book Flim-Flam Man: The True Story of My Father's Counterfeit Life.

The classical music of Chopin accompanies Jennifer (Dylan)’s recollections of her childhood - brought up with a mix of sadness and nostalgia by the dreamy, Malick-like cinematography of Daniel Moder - but not even when Bob Seger’s "Night Moves" aims for happier times, we get the film to get better. The narrative gets inescapably trapped in the dramatic circles of the family that Jennifer’s obsession with the secret life of her criminal father (Sean), becomes indifferent, torpid and unsurprising.

The disappointing reconstruction of this erratic father-daughter relationship is crammed with depressing tones, miserable supplication and vain attempts to reach the viewers’ emotions. In fact, the breakdown scenes border the embarrassing, and if Sean gets away with his natural acting instincts, Dylan never impresses in her insincere wails. 

Therefore, there’s not much here to cling on to, and maybe Sean, who did some lovely work behind the camera in the past - The Pledge (2001) and Into the Wild (2007) are good examples - should really think about directorial retirement.

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