Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Media Watch

The Refreshing Pedestrian Scenes of “Silver Linings Playbook”

false

I finally got around to seeing the Oscar-nominated "Silver Linings Playbook," and it's a charming film. It certainly deserves to be right up there with the top pictures of 2012. And as the film unspooled, I got a pleasant surprise: Neither of the main characters owns (or drives) a car.

Except for the opening scenes where Pat (Bradley Cooper) is driven home to a Philadelphia suburb after eight months in a mental health facility, Pat and Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) spend nearly the entire movie getting to know each other while on foot. Whether it's on a date, walking home from a friend's dinner party, going out for a run, walking to eat cereal at the local diner, or just arguing in the street, this film shows them moving as pedestrians and it's very refreshing. You really sense that the characters need to be in this alfresco mode, and that talking while walking is therapeutic and healthy.

Of course, one could argue their carlessness plays up their mental health problems and that they are not fully integrated with "normal" society. So do the filmmakers want us to think that since both of them are going through emotionally tough times, they're not stable enough to drive? Possibly.

But it also just might be that their constitutionals and interactions give these characters more depth and let us get closer to them. Unburdened by the automobile, they have time to sort things out, to communicate, and to let their minds breathe.

In the end, the director knows these intentions the best, and when I realized the director/writer was David O. Russell, who grew up in New York City, it started to make some sense. In 2004, he directed the amazing "I Heart Huckabees," an off-beat tale about existentialism and quirky characters in search of themselves. It's one of my all-time favorite comedies.

"Huckabees" contains many scenes of characters using bicycles for transport and has an environmental message at its heart.  Quite possibly its funniest moment is when firefighter Mark Wahlberg rides his bicycle on an emergency call and beats the firetruck to the scene after it gets caught in a traffic jam.

false

Once again, the bicycles in "Huckabees" may be meant to emphasize these characters' eccentricities. Does this make the audience more prone to laugh at them?  Or does it make the characters seem more inspired, intrepid, and smart?  In the end, the answer is probably both and there's really nothing wrong with that.

Thoughts and other movies?  Leave them below.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Delivery App Regulation Should Learn from Commercial Carting Reform

Third party delivery apps say they have no ability to police the very system they created — while the city's patchwork regulation isn't addressing the root of the problem.

November 17, 2025

Monday’s Headlines: Permanent Paseo Edition

We journeyed to Jackson Heights to celebrate a milestone in the life of the 34th Avenue open street. Plus other news.

November 17, 2025

‘The Brake’ Podcast: Is a ‘Life After Cars’ Really Possible?

"This book is an invitation to imagine a better world in which people are put before cars," says co-author Sarah Goodyear.

November 17, 2025

World Day of Remembrance: ‘My Brother Did Not Die in Vain’

A drunk driver killed Kevin Cruickshank while he was biking in New York City. The movement for safer streets showed me that my brother did not die in vain.

November 16, 2025

World Day of Remembrance: The Fight to ‘Stop Super Speeders’ Has Gone National

The bills would require the worst of the worst drivers to at least adhere to the speed limit, which is not too much to ask.

November 16, 2025

Council Members Put Everything But Riders First at ‘Bus Oversight’ Hearing

The Council spent its last bus oversight hearing of its term asking the MTA and city to pull back on bus lane enforcement.

November 14, 2025
See all posts