I don't remember Lucille Ball being Botoxed to death and looking like a piece of shiny wax fruit. Nicole Kidman looks like she's wearing a mask...it's a wonder that she can smile without her face cracking. A word to the wise....lay off the cosmetic surgery, Botox, and fillers. It makes you look so much worse.
Being the Ricardos
2021
Action / Biography / Drama / History
Being the Ricardos
2021
Action / Biography / Drama / History
Plot summary
In 1939, Lucy Ball is contracted to RKO Pictures. She gets small parts in big studio productions, but featured mainly in low budget films. She meets one of the film's cast, the charismatic 22-year-old Cuban singer Desi Arnaz and the two fall for each other instantaneously. Months after filming, they marry and buy a home in Hollywood. Desi has a successful stint fronting the Desi Arnaz Orchestra that tours around the country, while Lucy continues her film career with little success. In 1948, she is cast in the radio show "My Favorite Husband", which becomes a success. The show draws interest from CBS and Philip Morris, but Ball only agrees if Desi plays her on screen husband. By 1953, the show is renamed "I Love Lucy" and becomes a smash hit with nearly 60 million viewers each week. On the night of the live filming, a newspaper article deems Lucy a Communist. Lucy admits but Desi insists not to tell the truth. They are now facing a crisis that could end their careers and their marriage.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 2160p.WEBMovie Reviews
Nicole Kidman looks like she's been embalmed
A Thoroughly Unsatisfying Film With An Identity Crisis
I can't say enough on just how boring and uninteresting this snooze-fest is. "Being the Ricardos" is miscast, poorly directed, the storyline is choppy, and lacks any chemistry between Kidman and Bardem as Lucy and Desi. And trying to suspend disbelief that Nicole Kidman is Lucille Ball is not going to happen. I can't get past that puffy prosthetic-riddled face. Lucille Ball was a beautiful woman, Kidman looks like a hungover alcoholic. And Javier Bardem as Desi Arnaz is no prize either. It was good that Aaron Sorkin gave us a peek behind the scenes, and showed us how bringing a TV show to life is more than just memorizing lines from a script. There's a lot of back and forth, plus creative differences involved to get to the finished product. But that's where any interest ended for me. Sorkin is a much better writer than he is a director.
Sorkin's simply not a good enough director to bring out the intimate and personal details of the characters he's directing. Neither Lucy nor Desi had any emotional depth. Kidman was wooden and unconvincing as Lucille Ball, and Bardem was struggling to find his footing as Desi Arnaz, and that's strange to see with him. J. K. Simmons was the absolute best thing in this flailing mess of a film as Fred Mertz, and an honorable mention goes to Tony Hale as Jess Oppenheimer.
I think if Sorkin just stayed with the one week "Red Scare" and the behind-the-scenes drama, "Being the Ricardos" would have been a much MUCH better film (Lucille Ball was outed by radio news legend Walter Winchell, as a one-time member of the Communist Party. Then Arnaz is accused of cheating on Lucy by the tabloids, plus, Ball in real-life was pregnant and wanted her pregnancy written into the show, which during this puritanical era, was problematic for the network because they preferred its viewers to remain ignorant of how babies are made).
Sorkin should have played to his strengths, instead of clumsily time-jumping from when Lucy and Desi first met and Ball's earlier career, back to their current reality of their strained marriage and the very real possibility of losing the one thing they're on the same page with during the communist issue with Lucy, and that's their show, "I Love Lucy.
But don't get me started with that puzzlingly weird faux documentary silliness interspersed within "Being the Ricardos", where Sorkin had actors playing older versions of those who worked on "I Love Lucy". Was this a docudrama, a documentary or a mockumentary? I have no idea, but what I do know is, that decision was a whole lot of nonsense.
"Being the Ricardos" could have been a great film, but it is a glaring example of when someone with an abundance of screenwriting talent, should have handed the casting and directing over to someone else who was better at it. Sorkin had too many hats and truthfully, only one of them fit. It's a thoroughly unsatisfying film with glaring flaws and an identity crisis.
Frustrating
Lucille Ball was amazing. The show I Love Lucy was amazing. This movie is not, and it's so frustrating because not only is it about an American icon and an iconic show, the historical aspect of the communist stuff fascinating. This writing is boring and creates no dramatic tension or emotional attachment to the characters.
Nicole Kidman was not a good choice for Lucy. She is a beautiful woman but she has made certain choices regarding her appearance, and those choices include the heavy use of Botox and fillers, which consequently results in a very limited range of expressions on her face. That is the exact OPPOSITE of what made Lucy special. Lucy was one of the most expressive actors on TV. She quite literally a flexible face and used those great expressions to make us laugh.
Everything about this movie was frustrating. The sets and costumes look good though.