It’s a “Safe” Bet After Seeing This Film You’ll Wish You’d Taken Piano Lessons When You Were a Kid
Reviews and Comments by Ken Burke
I invite you to join me on a regular basis to see how my responses to current cinematic offerings compare to the critical establishment, which I’ll refer to as either the CCAL (Collective Critics at Large) if they’re supportive or the OCCU (Often Cranky Critics Universe) when they go negative. However, due to COVID concerns I’m mostly addressing streaming options with limited visits to theaters, where I don’t think I’ve missed much anyway, but better options are on the horizon. (Note: Anything in bold blue below [or near purple] is a link to something in the above title or the review.)
My reviews’ premise: “You can’t please everyone, so you got to please yourself.”
I’m a bit late in posting this week; instead of spending my usual Tuesday writing the text for these postings I spent the day with my wonderful wife, Nina Kindblad, celebrating our 36th wedding anniversary, time well shared. Next week I’m back on a more usual basis; I’ll have a surprise for you.
Tuner (Daniel Roher) rated R 107 min.
Here’s the trailer:
(Use the full screen button in the image’s lower right to enlarge its size;
activate the same button or use “esc” keyboard key to return to normal.)
If you can abide plot spoilers read on, but this blog’s intended for those who’ve seen the film or want to save some $ (as well as recognizing those readers like me who just aren’t that tech-savvy). To help any of you who want to learn more details yet avoid these all-important plot-reveals I’ll identify any give-away sentences/sentence-clusters with colors plus arrows:
⇒The first and last words will be noted with arrows and red.⇐ OK, now continue on if you prefer.
WHAT HAPPENS: Elderly Harry Horowitz (Dustin Hoffman) owns a piano tuning business where most of the work’s now done by his apprentice, Niki White (Leo Woodall), a young man with skill on the keys but who hasn’t played in years because he has hyperacusis which makes his ears very sensitive to loud noises so he usually wears noise-cancelling headphones except when he’s tuning because in quiet environments he has amazing abilities at hearing the proper notes with his perfect pitch. Niki then works 2 jobs which eventually change his life: (1) At a music conservatory he meets Ruthie Waymon (Havana Rose Liu), nervously/diligently preparing for an audition for famed composer Marius Maissner (Jean Reno) in hopes of him taking her on as an assistant/trainee, (2) At a rich woman’s home he’s to tune a piano for an important event the next day, but the noisy preparations force him to come back that night when he's distracted by a new source of noise, the installation of a security system by Uri (Lior Raz) and his guys who, for a reason I didn’t catch, need to open the house safe so Niki moves them along by opening it himself (a self-taught skill to help Harry when he accidently locked his hearing aids in his own safe, then couldn’t remember the combination); Niki surmises Uri’s crew are thieves, even as he gets an invitation to join them. That offer soon comes to pass when Harry suffers a heart attack, Niki learns from Harry’s wife, Marla (Tovah Feldshuh), the old man’s $36,000 in debt, so soon Niki’s a safe cracker earning a hefty tip as Uri takes various valuables which he sells for high prices; Niki keeps applying his ill-gotten earnings to Harry’s tab, then meets Ruthie again when water from her apartment ceiling splashes onto her own piano so she contacts Niki for help he eagerly provides, as a romance blossoms between them.
Then things ultimately go bad after Niki gives Ruthie a stolen watch to replace one she lost from her grandmother (more on that shortly), his next job is to help some Korean crooks get a necessary password for their uncle’s cryptocurrency wallet, but armed Uncle Yong (C.S. Lee) comes in, forces Niki to eat the password paper, then the uncle’s shot from behind by Uri’s nephew, Benny (Nissan Sakira). Harry dies, Uri forces Niki to open the uncle’s safe again but there’s no backup password (yet, Niki knows it having quickly memorized the original paper before he ate it), Niki rushes to Ruthie’s recital where Maissner’s impressed with her but sees her watch which belonged to his grandmother (died in the Holocaust), was stolen along with his grandfather’s watch from his safe; Niki comes clean about his night jobs, offers to make amends by retrieving grandfather’s watch. ⇒However, he’s caught trying to open Uri’s safe, is beaten severely. Waking up in a hospital Niki finds he’s partially deaf but no longer sensitive to loudness (also finds Uri left the watch for him). Niki returns the watch to Maissner, now Ruthie’s mentor, then Niki plays a marvelous piano piece for her before noting the instrument needs tuning.⇐ You can find more plot details to discover at this site.
SO WHAT? Last week when I posted my review of The Christophers (Steven Soderbergh) I noted how that film about artistic painting took me back to my own life as a painter decades ago before I starting trying to find my artistic expression in writing/illustrating these blogs; well, this week’s film also gives me thoughts on my past, but in this case—just as the title of this posting alludes to—it’s about the piano lessons I never took, despite my mother’s ongoing request I do so (she had an ulterior motive, though, telling me if I’d take lessons so would she but not just on her own; how we could have afforded a piano for our necessary practice between lessons I have no idea, but we never got that far in the stubborn [on both our parts] debates about the lessons). As best I remember, this is the only topic that I resisted her on (knowing full well what was likely to be the result if I challenged her on much of anything else), so I never took the lessons. Watching the dexterity and marvelous music coming from Ruthie and Niki in this film (no matter how much of it resulted from the actors’ keyboard abilities or how talented stand-ins were able to leave a seamless result on screen so it easily looks like Liu and Woodall are actually in musical command of what we see) I have to admit a longing to be able to play that instrument even at 10% of what we encounter in Tuner, so, yeah, Mom, you were right on this failed insistence as I know that at 78 I’m not about to frustrate myself with seeking a piano teacher to help me try to stumble along on an electric keyboard (which I did attempt to do back in January of 1987, but a month later I met Nina and put aside all that needed practice time then [not that I’m complaining about how our time together has been/is spent]).
So, I’ll just have to be content listening to piano virtuosos whenever I can encounter them, which I got a grand dose of in this film, while also appreciating the dedication Ruthie’s determined to bring to her art just as Niki tries to make the most of what he can hear fluidly when properly tuning pianos so that others can best showcase what ivories-wizardry they’re (hopefully) capable of. We also get some useful moral lessons here about whether the end justifies the means as Niki knows he’s being a criminal but in order to help Harry just as Uri gives us a bit of rationale noting the stolen items probably will take a while to be missed, then their value will be compensated by insurance claims (except in cases like Maissner’s watches where their personal value is emotionally priceless). All in all, this is a marvelous tale to watch, ponder, and appreciate which I'd hope you will consider doing.
BOTTOM LINE FINAL COMMENTS: Tuner opened rather quietly in domestic (U.S.-Canada) theaters on May 22, 2026, although its presence has been limited with the widest release at only 504 venues (down to 75 now), taking in so far a measly $4.2 million ($10.8 million worldwide); despite its limited big-screen presence, however, the CCAL actively encourages you to seek it out, with the Rotten Tomatoes positive reviews at a very-encouraging 94%, while the normally-notably-lower Metacritic average score is 75%; you can find it on streaming for a $19.99 rental at Amazon Prime Video (but leaving there in 18 days) and Apple TV (same price rental can also be found at Fandango at Home, but I’ve given up on them because I tried to watch it there but could never get the captions function to engage despite multiple efforts, so that platform’s no longer of interest to me because both Nina and I need some audio help, even when wearing hearing aids). For an example of a critic who really loved it, here’s Katie Walsh (MC 100) of the Chicago Tribune: “For the purposes of this screenplay, this world is small, and filled with coincidences, but there are twists and turns along the way that will make you gasp, as story beats click into place down the line. Roher also builds out this world with layers of culture, character and music — whether it’s the jazz musicians Harry ran with back in the day (Herbie Hancock makes a cameo), the serious conservatory students (Ruthie’s music is composed by Marius de Vries), or the underground raves thrown by the Israeli crew. […] It’s a thrill to watch this kind of original, adult movie that are all too rare these days, and Roher hits all the right notes with this move into narrative filmmaking.” Go, girl!
SHORT TAKES
Related Links Which You Might Find Interesting:
Here’s an opinion from The New York Times about the best 2026 movies so far. I don’t even know anything about most of their citations, just The Christophers and Disclosure Day (Steven Spielberg).
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