Lucky (2017 American film)


Lucky is a 2017 American drama film, starring Harry Dean Stanton and directed by John Carroll Lynch from a screenplay by Logan Sparks and Drago Sumonja. It was Stanton's final onscreen role before his death at the age of 91 on September 15, 2017. The film tells the story of a 90-year-old man nicknamed "Lucky" and his struggles against encroaching old age. The film depicts his coming to terms with his own mortality as he searches for enlightenment.

Plot

The film starts with Lucky waking up, smoking a cigarette, and then doing yoga. He lives alone in an isolated house in the small desert town of Piru, California. He drinks a glass of cold milk every morning after yoga before getting dressed and heading out the door on his daily routine.
He heads to a diner for coffee where he is on friendly terms with the owner, Joe. Joe suggests Lucky quit smoking or it will kill him. Lucky claims that if smoking could kill him he would have died already. He works on his crossword puzzle from his daily newspaper. He walks to a local convenience store where he buys another pack of cigarettes and another carton of milk. The owner, Bibi, tells Lucky that her son Juan is having his tenth birthday in one week. That evening, Lucky stops at a bar and has a few Bloody Marys with the locals. One of the regulars, Howard, is depressed that his pet tortoise has escaped.
The next morning, Lucky becomes entranced by the blinking numbers on his coffeepot. He gets light-headed and falls over, smashing his ceramic mug. At a clinic, Dr. Christian Kneedler gives Lucky a clean bill of health, and mentions that Lucky has out-smoked and outlived the majority of people in his age group. At the diner later that morning, Lucky mentions how he fell and everyone becomes concerned for his safety. Not wanting to feel like a burden and complaining that his time is short, Lucky leaves. That night, Lucky calls a friend while he watches TV. He tells his friend that when he was a boy in Kentucky, he accidentally shot a mockingbird with his BB gun. He describes how devastating the silence was, and that it was the saddest thing he had ever seen. Lucky thanks his friend for listening and hangs up.
Back at the bar, Lucky listens to a story from one of the bar regulars, Paulie, about how he met and married his first wife. Lucky reflects on how he never married or had any lasting relationships. Lucky then sees Howard talking with a lawyer named Bobby Lawrence about making a will for himself and wanting to leave all of his possessions to his pet tortoise. Lucky causes a scene over Howard's life choices, declaring that everyone in this world is alone and is meant to be alone. Another day or two later, one of the diner staff, Loretta, visits Lucky to check on him. While smoking marijuana, Lucky shows Loretta old photos of his military service in the US Navy and they watch old VHS tapes of Liberace performing in concert as Lucky comments on his own past. While having coffee at the diner, Lucky runs into Bobby Lawrence, where he confides in him about his accident days earlier. Bobby tells Lucky about a time when he nearly got into a car accident that could have been fatal and tells Lucky to always be prepared for the unexpected. Lucky visits a pet store to look for a small animal to adopt as a companion, but he instead decides on a box of live crickets.
At the diner the next morning, Lucky meets a World War II Marine veteran named Fred. Lucky tells Fred about his time in the US Navy during the war in the Pacific and shares that his nickname arose from having the relatively safe job of cook on an LST. Fred tells Lucky a story about how after the Marines secured a beach, the locals began to commit suicide, jumping from cliffs. The Japanese had told the island locals that the Americans would kill and rape them if they were captured. In the mayhem of battle, he encountered a young girl, smiling amidst all the carnage. Fred wondered how she could smile in the midst of all that misery and death. One of Fred's fellow soldiers explained that the girl was a Buddhist; she thought that they are about to kill her and she was smiling at the prospect. The story leaves Lucky speechless. Upon returning home, Lucky sets the clock on his coffee machine to the correct time to stop the blinking. He attends Bibi's son Juan's birthday party and comes to enjoy having company. He sings "Volver Volver" in Spanish for the attendees.
That evening, Lucky goes back to the bar for more Bloody Marys. Howard has not found his tortoise yet, and concludes that all things must eventually come to an end. Lucky then attempts to light a cigarette at the bar despite being ordered not to do so by the owner, Elaine. He delivers a speech to the bar patrons that everything goes away eventually and that we are left with nothing. Elaine asks what is one supposed to do with nothing. Lucky simply replies "you smile". The remark transforms the mood of the bar; Lucky lights up his cigarette and steps outside.
The next morning, Lucky wakes up and goes through his usual routine of doing yoga and drinking a glass of cold milk. He goes for a walk through town as he always does and passes by the outdoor botanic garden where he was banned for public smoking. In the desert, Lucky lights up a cigarette, and looks up at a tall and imposing cactus with many smaller cacti growing from it. He breaks the fourth wall and smiles as he begins his walk back into town. As Lucky heads down the desert path alone, a tortoise trudges across the path from one end to the other before disappearing into the desert bushes.

Cast

On July 7, 2016, it was revealed that Lucky had begun filming in Los Angeles.
On April 7, 2017, it was announced that Magnolia Pictures acquired U.S. and international rights to distribute the film.

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, Lucky has a rating of 97%, based on 139 reviews, with an average score of 7.82/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Lucky is a bittersweet meditation on mortality, punctuating the career of beloved character actor Harry Dean Stanton." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 80 out of 100, based on 34 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Matt Zoller Seitz of RogerEbert.com gave the film four out of four stars, writing that the film is: Seitz later named Lucky as the best film of 2017, stating that "I didn't expect much more than indie-film quirk when I read the description of this film, but emotionally it destroyed me."

Accolades