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Tamara Jenkins

Writer-director Tamara Jenkins took her initial career bow in the late 1990s, riding to fame on the crest of the American independent film movement in the same generation as such contemporaries as Paul Thomas Anderson and David Fincher. While not nearly as prolific as the said directors, Jenkins did net exceptionally favorable reviews comparable to those thrust on her colleagues, though a lengthy period in between her freshman and sophomore efforts kept her out of the public limelight and therefore forced a low profile on the nascent filmmaker. The daughter of a Philadelphia-area strip club owner father and a hat-check girl mother, Jenkins survived a messy period when her parents divorced; she wound up in the custody of her dad and followed him to the west coast, where he tried to make a living hawking oversized cars during the energy crisis of the mid-1970s. In time, increasingly challenging parental circumstances forced Jenkins's older brother to serve as her guardian. During her late 20s, she began helming acclaimed short films that wore autobiographical influences on the sleeve, and received a hand-up from two sources: a covetable Guggenheim grant and Robert Redford, at whose Sundance Institute Jenkins penned the script for her debut feature, Slums of Beverly Hills. Fortuitously (and unsurprisingly), Redford carried his assistance a step further when he opted to executive produce Slums; it premiered in 1998. This offbeat seriocomedy tells of a young woman (Natasha Lyonne) enduring an impoverished adolescence on the "wrong side of the tracks" in 1970s Los Angeles, with a single dad employed as a car salesman. (In other words: more than a faint echo of Jenkins's own experience). In addition to then-ingénue Lyonne, the film boasted the participation of such heavyweights as Alan Arkin and Marisa Tomei. The film gleaned critical raves and a substantial cult following, and performed respectably at the box office.

Unfortunately, almost a decade passed in-between this and The Savages, Jenkins's 2007 follow-up - a lapse the director attributes entirely and exclusively to years of pursuing dead-end projects that failed to materialize. (She later admitted that she felt so dismayed and so disappointed by the mid-late 2000s that she pushed The Savages through at all costs and refused to back down until the film got made). Though a somewhat bleaker and more difficult work, this feature arguably demonstrated more mature craftsmanship and more commanding performances than its predecessor, and thus fulfilled promises implicitly made by Slums; a small-scaled, character-driven seriocomedy, Savages stars Philip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney as an über-dysfunctional brother and sister suddenly forced to take on responsibility for their ailing and aging father (Philip Bosco). This outing reeled in even more enthusiastic critical acclaim than its forerunner and netted a slew of awards including two Oscar nods: a Best Actress nomination for Linney and a Best Original Screenplay nomination for Jenkins. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

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The Savages
The Savages (2007)
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Slums of Beverly Hills (1998)
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