Revolutionary Road

This week, Helen tackles the dark heart of suburbia, in Sam Mendes’ Revolutionary Road (2008).

Have you ever felt trapped in a life that you didn’t want?  This is where we enter the lives of Frank and April Wheeler. Frank (Leonardo DiCaprio) is in a boring dead-end job.  The commute to work is alongside other drones doing the same old thing.  April (Kate Winslet) is a ‘stay at home mum’, who has no real connection with the other women on the street, and feels like she needs to pretend to be like the other housewives.  She wants to be out doing something in the world, and he wants to really ‘live life’.


April is the first to admit to their trapped feeling:  “Look at us. We’re just like everyone else. We’ve bought into the same, ridiculous delusion. That we have to resign from life and settle down the moment we have children. And we’ve been punishing each other for it.”  She comes up with a plan to move to Paris: she’ll work, while he figures out what he really wants to do with his life.  When they tell their friends the good news they don’t really understand.  Shep is disturbed by the idea that Frank would be supported by his wife (the film is set on the 1950’s, but has this attitude really changed all that much with the majority of people?).  After the Wheelers leave, Millie cries, and I don’t think she’s even sure why.  Could it be that she is unhappy with her life too?  The only person who seems to understand the Wheelers decision to change their lives is John, a man undergoing treatment at a mental institution.  April says, “If being crazy means living life as if it matters, then I don’t mind being completely insane.”

When April finds out that she is pregnant, she knows that her plans for breaking free are not going to happen.  She doesn’t want another baby.  Frank, however doesn’t really understand what the problem is. Life is better for him now, probably due to his wife being happier with the hope of a new life. He’s been offered a promotion at work, and there are women to flirt with in the office. Frank isn’t trapped, as April is.  He really doesn’t understand April’s point of view, and perhaps we don’t either.  Abortion is a difficult subject.


Frank tells April that her desire to abort is unnatural and un-womanly, but I don’t think I agree.  In today’s world, living in a developed country, contraception is more widely available and more effective (but, of course, never 100%). So how would you feel, if after you’d decided your family was the right size, you found out you were pregnant?  Even if actually going through with an abortion was too far down the track for you, do you think it unnatural or un-womanly to want one?

What does it mean to be a woman?

NEXT WEEK: Heidi welcomes in the season with Arnaud Desplechin’s ‘A Christmas Tale’ (2008).  For a more extended schedule,  check in here.