A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood


A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood is a 2019 American biographical drama film directed by Marielle Heller and written by Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster, inspired by the 1998 article "Can You Say... Hero?" by Tom Junod, published in Esquire. The film stars Tom Hanks, Matthew Rhys, Susan Kelechi Watson, and Chris Cooper. It depicts Lloyd Vogel, a troubled journalist for Esquire who is assigned to profile television icon Fred Rogers.
The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2019, and was theatrically released in the United States on November 22, 2019, by Sony Pictures Releasing. It received praise from critics for Hanks' and Rhys' performances, Heller's direction, and the heart-warming messages, and grossed $67 million worldwide. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood was chosen by Time magazine as one of the ten best films of the year. For his performance, Hanks was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the Academy Awards, as well as the Golden Globes, Critics' Choice, Screen Actors Guild Awards, and BAFTA Awards, among others.

Plot

The film initially begins as an episode of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, with Mister Rogers showing off a picture board with the portraits of some of his friends. He then introduces the viewer to "a new friend," Lloyd Vogel, who he explains is having a hard time forgiving the person who hurt him, and asks the viewer to think about forgiveness.
In 1998, Lloyd Vogel is an Esquire journalist known for his cynical writing style. He attends his sister Lorraine's wedding, along with his wife, Andrea, and their newborn son, Gavin. During the reception, Lloyd's estranged father, Jerry, wants to discuss Lloyd's dead mother Lila. Jerry says there are two sides to every story, but Lloyd won't hear him and punches him in the face, starting a fight when others try to restrain him.
Lloyd's editor assigns him to interview children's television presenter Fred Rogers for a 400-word article about heroes, but Lloyd feels the assignment is beneath him. He travels to the WQED studio in Pittsburgh to interview Rogers. He sees Rogers on set with a disabled child and then views filming of the programme. A puppet is mad at someone and does not know what to do with his feelings. Afterwards, Rogers is dismissive of his fame and displays concern for Lloyd's nose injury. Lloyd relates to Rogers the issue of his relationship with his father, and the fight.
Determined to expose Rogers' friendly persona as an act, Lloyd watches several episodes of Rogers' show but is unable to discern anything. Lloyd interviews Rogers again when he visits New York. During the interview, Rogers dodges Lloyd's questions and reminisces about raising his two sons. He states that if the things viewers tell him may be a burden he deals with this in many ways. When they mention anger, Fred says a person might swim or even bang the low keys on a piano. Fred then takes out his puppets and asks Lloyd about his childhood "friends" meaning toys. Lloyd says he had Old Rabbit. But when Fred presses him on his parents and the rabbit Lloyd becomes frustrated and ends the interview.
Lloyd arrives home to find Jerry and his girlfriend Dorothy there talking with Andrea. Lloyd berates Jerry for cheating on his mother Lila, while she was dying of cancer. He orders him to leave, but Jerry suffers a heart attack and is transported to the hospital. Lloyd refuses to remain overnight at the hospital with the rest of the family and returns to Pittsburgh to see Rogers.
Exhausted, Lloyd collapses on the set of the Neighborhood of Make-Believe and dreams about his repressed childhood trauma. In his dream, he stumbles into an episode of Rogers' show about hospitals, finding himself wearing rabbit ears and shrunken to the size of Daniel Striped Tiger and King Friday XIII, while Rogers and Andrea tower over him. Lloyd also dreams about Lila, who urges him to release his anger.
Rogers and his wife, Joanne, bring Lloyd to their home to recuperate. Lloyd and Rogers later go to a restaurant, where Rogers asks Lloyd to spend one minute thinking about the people who "loved him into being," and encourages him to forgive Jerry. Lloyd apologizes to Andrea for leaving her and Gavin at the hospital and visits Jerry and Dorothy at their home. He learns that Jerry is dying of cardiac stenosis, which was the reason Jerry attempted to reconnect with Lloyd. Lloyd forgives Jerry, promises to be a better father to Gavin, and writes an article about Rogers' impact on his life. Lorraine, her husband Todd, and Rogers visit Jerry. Rogers asks Jerry to pray for him before he departs. Jerry dies shortly after Rogers' visit and Lloyd's 10,000-word article, "Can You Say... Hero?" is published as Esquires cover story.
The film transitions back into the episode about Lloyd that Rogers appears to be telling. He says goodbye to the viewer before exiting his home. A director yells cut, and production wraps for the day at the studio. While various crew members exit the studio, Rogers plays the piano. Once alone he smashes the keys in frustration, before playing normally, signaling the end of another beautiful day.

Cast

A jaded journalist who is assigned to profile Rogers for the magazine Esquire. Lloyd is based loosely on journalist Tom Junod, whose encounter with Rogers was adapted into the film. Heller described Lloyd as the viewer's "entry point into Fred's teachings" and expressed hope that Lloyd's character development and growth as a new father would compel viewers to reflect upon themselves.
The creator and host of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. To prepare for his role, Hanks visited the Fred Rogers Center at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, for research in the Fred Rogers Archives and also watched Won't You Be My Neighbor?, a 2018 documentary film. At the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, Hanks recalled watching "hundreds of hours" of footage of Rogers on set and behind the scenes in order to get into character. Director Marielle Heller noted that Rogers "doesn't have the dynamic nature you need for a protagonist for a movie" and considered him "the antagonist who comes into someone's life and flips it upside down through his philosophy and the way he lived his life".
A public attorney, Lloyd's wife, and a fan of Rogers' show. Watson, herself a fan of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, described her character as a "career woman" who faces unique challenges of patience and adaptation as the mother of a newborn.
Lloyd's estranged father and a philanderer who cheated on his wife Lila and abandoned Lloyd and Lorraine when they were children. In a press interview for the film, Cooper described his character as "multidimensional" and compared filming a scene with Hanks to seeing the "eyes of God".
Fred's wife. Plunkett met with Joanne Rogers to prepare for the role.
The President & CEO of Family Communications. In a radio interview, Colantoni said he became friends with the real Bill Isler while filming and described his character as having been "so important to Fred".
Jerry's second wife. Makkena described her character as part of Vogel's "dysfunctional, complicated family".
Additional cast members include Carmen Cusack as Margy, a producer of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood; Jessica Hecht as Lila Vogel, Lloyd's mother and Jerry's ex-wife; Maddie Corman as Betty Aberlin, an actress starring as Lady Aberlin on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood; Daniel Krell as David Newell, an actor starring as Mr. McFeely; and Jordan, Naomi, and Zoey Harsh as Gavin Vogel, Lloyd's son.
Notable cameos in the film include Rogers' wife Joanne, Mr. McFeely actor David Newell, Family Communications head Bill Isler, and Mister Rogers' Neighborhood producer Margy Whitmer who appear as customers in a restaurant that Rogers and Lloyd meet in. Arsenio Hall and Oprah Winfrey make uncredited appearances in archive footage of talk shows that Lloyd watches in the film, and Fred Rogers appears in archive footage of his show during the ending credits, singing the song "You've Got to Do It".

Production

On January 29, 2018, it was announced that Sony's TriStar Pictures had bought the worldwide distribution rights to the film You Are My Friend, a biographical film based on a 1998 Esquire magazine article about television personality Fred Rogers, who would be played by Tom Hanks. The film's script by Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster appeared among the 2013 Black List of best unproduced screenplays and it would be directed by Marielle Heller, while producers would be Big Beach's Marc Turtletaub and Peter Saraf along with Youree Henley.
In July 2018, Matthew Rhys joined the cast of the film to play the journalist Lloyd Vogel, with production set to start in September 2018. Being Welsh, Rhys had never even heard of Fred Rogers before being offered the role. In August 2018, Chris Cooper was added to the cast to play Vogel's father, and in September, Susan Kelechi Watson was added. In October 2018, Enrico Colantoni, Maryann Plunkett, Tammy Blanchard, Wendy Makkena, Sakina Jaffrey, Carmen Cusack, Harpster and Maddie Corman joined the cast of the film. In 2018, Nate Heller was chosen to score the film.
Principal photography on the film began on September 10, 2018, in Pittsburgh, with several sets converted into New York City. Filming also took place in Fred Rogers Studio at WQED where the late television host recorded Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, and the Jewish Community Center in Squirrel Hill. The crew consulted with original crew members from Rogers' television series and also brought in the same broadcast cameras and monitors used in the original production. The film received tax credits of approximately $9.5 million against a production budget of $45 million for filming in Pittsburgh. Production wrapped on November 9, 2018.
On October 12, 2018, sound mixer James Emswiller had a heart attack and fell from a second-story balcony. He was taken to University of Pittsburgh Medical Center-Mercy, where he was pronounced dead. The film title was announced on December 27, 2018. The trailer for the film was released on July 22, 2019.

Release

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2019. The film was originally going to be released on October 18, 2019, by Sony Pictures Releasing, but in May 2018 was pushed back a month to November 22, 2019.

Home media

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood was released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment on Digital HD on February 4, 2020 and for an Ultra HD Blu-ray, Blu-ray, and DVD release on February 18.

Reception

Box office

, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood has grossed $61.7 million in the United States and Canada, and $6.1 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $67.8 million, against a production budget of $25 million.
In the United States and Canada, the film was released alongside Frozen II and 21 Bridges, and was projected to gross around $15 million from 3,231 theaters in its opening weekend. The film made $4.5 million on its first day, including $900,000 from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $13.3 million, finishing third at the box office. The film fell just 11% in its second weekend, making $11.8 million and finishing fifth, and remained in fifth place the following weekend with $5.2 million.

Critical response

On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 96% based on 336 reviews, with an average rating of 8.07/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Much like the beloved TV personality that inspired it, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood offers a powerfully affecting message about acceptance and understanding." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 80 out of 100, based on 50 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while those at PostTrak gave it an average four out of five stars, with 66% saying they would definitely recommend it.
Steve Pond of TheWrap wrote: "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood finds a gentle state of grace and shows the courage and smarts to stay in that zone, never rushing things or playing for drama... But just as Mr. Rogers used his show to talk about big issues with children in a tone that was softer and more halting than you'd expect given the subject matter, so does Heller stick to understatement in a way that threatens to become dull or sappy but never does." Armond White of National Review was more critical: "Heller and screenwriters Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster don't show enough faith in Rogers' remedies—and not enough interest in their religious origins. In short, the movie seems wary of faith and settles for secular sentimentality to account for his sensibility and behavior. This not only weakens the film, but it also hobbles Hanks's characterization." Benjamin Lee of The Guardian wrote: "It's a given that Hanks will nab at least a best supporting actor nomination but it would be all too easy to forget his co-star. The cynic-becomes-a-believer arc is age old but it unfolds here without cliche thanks to an emotionally intelligent script from Noah Harpster and Micah Fitzerman-Blue, but mainly because of a marvelous, prickly turn from Rhys."

Accolades

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipientResult
Academy AwardsFebruary 9, 2020Best Supporting ActorTom Hanks
Art Directors Guild AwardsFebruary 1, 2020Excellence in Production Design for a Contemporary FilmJade Healy
British Academy Film AwardsFebruary 2, 2020Best Actor in a Supporting RoleTom Hanks
Costume Designers Guild AwardsJanuary 28, 2020Excellence in Contemporary FilmArjun Bhasin
Critics' Choice Movie AwardsJanuary 12, 2020Best Supporting ActorTom Hanks
Critics' Choice Movie AwardsJanuary 12, 2020Best Adapted ScreenplayMicah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster
Golden Globe AwardsJanuary 5, 2020Best Supporting Actor—Motion PictureTom Hanks
Movieguide AwardsJanuary 24, 2020Best Movie for Mature AudiencesA Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Satellite AwardsDecember 19, 2019Best Supporting Actor—Motion PictureTom Hanks
Screen Actors Guild AwardsJanuary 19, 2020Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting RoleTom Hanks
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics AssociationDecember 8, 2019Best Supporting ActorTom Hanks
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics AssociationDecember 8, 2019Best Adapted ScreenplayMicah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster
Writers Guild of America AwardsFebruary 1, 2020Best Adapted ScreenplayMicah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster