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    Movie Review

    Maggie Gyllenhaal's The Lost Daughter deftly examines the nuances of motherhood

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 20, 2021 | 5:00 pm
    Maggie Gyllenhaal's The Lost Daughter deftly examines the nuances of motherhood
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    As many people can attest, being a parent is one of the hardest jobs one can face in life. Some people are suited for the role, and some aren’t. In films, bad parents are typically seen from the perspective of their children, whose emotional – and sometimes physical – scars reveal themselves through their own actions as adults. But few films ask you to try to understand the perspective of the parent who’s not always there for his or her children.

    That’s the challenge laid out for the viewer in The Lost Daughter, based on novel by Elena Ferrante. Leda (Olivia Colman) is a professor who has come to a small town in Greece for what she terms as a “working vacation.” What initially is a peaceful retreat turns into a unpleasant one as a loud and obnoxious New York family with access to her same private beach creates a ruckus for days on end.

    Leda has subsequent run-ins with two women in the group, sisters Callie (Dagmara Domincyzk) and Nina (Dakota Johnson), whose approaches to parenting are careless, at best. When Leda helps in a critical situation for the family, she becomes an object of fascination for them. That glare not only makes Leda act out in various ways, but also causes her to reflect on her own questionable rearing of her children, with Leda portrayed in flashback form by Jessie Buckley.

    Written and directed by Maggie Gyllenhaal, who’s making her feature film debut in both roles, the film has a propulsive energy to it as Leda finds herself increasingly entwined with a family she’d rather not have anything to do with. And while the perspective of the story initially puts the audience on Leda’s side, an assortment of reveals complicates matters, making viewers deal with shades of gray instead of black and white.

    Further muddying the waters is the presence of two men, Lyle (Ed Harris) and Will (Paul Mescal), who work for the hotel where Leda is staying. Each awakens a part of her that had remained dormant for years, although the re-emergence of that side of her is not necessarily welcome. Her thoughts regarding the men are in sharp contrast with those of the two women, and lend her decision-making abilities a further blow.

    A slight gripe with the film is how it makes the audience puzzle out the mere presence of the characters in their current location. The book was set in Italy with all Italian characters, while the film gives a mish-mash of nationalities who are together in Greece. Wondering how all of these people are in this far-flung location for so long takes up too much real estate in the story, undercutting the solid drama elsewhere.

    Colman survived for years as an actor on British television, but a slew of higher-profile roles in recent years have led to plum roles in movies, including an Oscar-winning one in The Favourite. She proves here why she’s so in-demand, with a subtle yet powerful performance. Johnson, who’s near-unrecognizable, does a solid job as an inattentive mother, and Buckley continues her own strong run with a character that is very unsympathetic.

    The Lost Daughter is a grueling yet ultimately rewarding ride, giving viewers an opportunity to shift their own views on the characters on multiple occasions. It’s a nice debut for Gyllenhaal as a filmmaker, who demonstrates a nuanced ability that rookie directors don’t often show.

    ---

    The Lost Daughter is now playing in select theaters; it will debut on Netflix on December 31.

    Dakota Johnson in The Lost Daughter.

    Dakota Johnson in The Lost Daughter
    Photo courtesy of Netflix
    Dakota Johnson in The Lost Daughter.
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    Critics' choice

    DFW film critics name One Battle After Another best movie of 2025

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 17, 2025 | 9:32 am
    Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another.

    The Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association has voted Paul Thomas Anderson's action thriller One Battle After Another the best film of 2025, according to the results of its 32nd annual critics’ poll released on Wednesday, December 17.

    The top award was one of five wins for the film in the poll, including Leonardo DiCaprio as Best Actor, Teyana Taylor as Best Supporting Actress, and Anderson for both Best Director and Best Screenplay.

    After One Battle After Another, the rest of the top 10 films in the poll were, in order, Sinners, Marty Supreme, Hamnet, Sentimental Value, Train Dreams, Frankenstein, Jay Kelly, Bugonia, and It Was Just an Accident.

    In addition to DiCaprio and Taylor, other acting awards included Rose Byrne as Best Actress for If I Had Legs, I'd Kick You and Stellan Skarsgård as Best Supporting Actor for Sentimental Value.

    The two other behind-the-scenes awards both went to Sinners, including Best Cinematography for Autumn Durald Arkapaw and Best Score for Ludwig Göransson.

    Sentimental Value also took home the award for Best Foreign Language Film, while Netflix got double wins with The Perfect Neighbor for Best Documentary and KPop Demon Hunters for Best Animated Film.

    The Russell Smith Award, given annually by the DFWFCA to the best low-budget or cutting-edge independent film, went to It Was Just an Accident.

    The Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association consists of 26 broadcast, print, and online journalists from throughout North Texas. For more information, visit dfwcritics.com.
    ---

    Author Alex Bentley is a member of the Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association.

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