Simon Axler is an aging actor who suffers from bouts of dementia. He is institutionalized after an incident during a Broadway play, then returns home, where he contemplates suicide in Hemingway style. When he embarks upon an affair with an old friend's amoral bisexual daughter, his world starts to fall apart. It ends on stage, with even Axler's audience and fellow actors unsure of what's real and what's not.
After reading and connecting with the book, Pacino decided to option the book and asked Barry Levinson to direct it.[3] Levinson decided to make the movie as a dark comedy, noting, "If you want to talk about an older actor in decline, just to do it as some straight drama didn’t seem that intriguing to me" also citing that comedy "seemed to me inherent in the piece".[4] Although both Pacino and Levinson have denied that the character of Simon is autobiographical to Pacino's life,[4] Pacino noted that he related to the material, stating that "it’s in, as they say, my wheelhouse."[3]
Although the film in the beginning had ample funding, the listed conditions got too much for Levinson, who rejected them and lost by his estimate "somewhere in the area of $6 million."[4] Subsequently it was decided to shoot the film incrementally with several breaks built in to accommodate Pacino's schedule. This was a new experience for Levinson although he welcomed the change of pace as "It added to the clarity."[4]
On February 4, 2014, it was announced that Millennium Films had acquired the worldwide rights to the film.[5]
Reception
The Humbling received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 53%, based on 64 reviews, with a rating of 5.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Humbling is an inarguable highlight of Al Pacino's late-period filmography, but that's an admittedly low bar that it doesn't always clear by a very wide margin."[6] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 59 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[7]