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    Movie Review

    The Goldfinch flies high with compelling story and performances

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 12, 2019 | 2:13 pm
    The Goldfinch flies high with compelling story and performances

    Surprisingly, film adaptations of Pulitzer Prize-winning novels are relatively rare. Of the last 20 winners of the prestigious award, only two — Michael Cunningham’s The Hours and Cormac McCarthy’s The Road — found their way to the big screen (two others were made into TV miniseries). A third, Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch, has now joined the list, hoping its literary pedigree will translate into film form.

    The film centers on Theodore Decker, who, as a boy (Oakes Fegley), survived a bombing at an art museum that killed his mother and many others. For reasons that are unknown for most of the film, Theodore took a painting called The Goldfinch following the explosion. The fateful decision helps him keep a connection with his mother, but it also haunts him as he becomes an adult (Ansel Elgort), knowing that the valuable artwork belongs in a museum.

    Some of the precious few people Theodore can rely on after his mother’s death are Mrs. Barbour (Nicole Kidman), whose family gives him a place to live, and antiques dealer Hobie (Jeffrey Wright), with whom he has a connection merely because of where he was in the museum at the time of the explosion. Those bonds remain after Theodore’s deadbeat father, Larry (Luke Wilson), and his girlfriend, Xandra (Sarah Paulson), reclaim him and move him from New York to the outskirts of Las Vegas.

    The film, directed by John Crowley (Brooklyn) and written by Peter Straughan, is a sprawling, 149-minute affair that one might expect from adapting a nearly 800-page novel. But the mysteries of Theodore’s life and the obstacles he faces keep the film compelling. The painting he took is the specter that trails him throughout his life, but it also keeps driving him forward, searching for meaning in a world that lets him down too many times to count.

    A plot-driven film like this is dependent on the relationships of its characters, and the filmmakers do a great job at establishing and reinforcing them. Hobie is Theodore’s most consistent friend, but contemporaries like Pippa (Aimee Laurence as child, Ashleigh Cummings as an adult) and Boris (Finn Wolfhard as a child, Aneurin Barnard as an adult) help him cope during hard times.

    Still, for a film that deals with death and guilt as much as it does, it keeps its emotions close to the vest. Both as a child and as an adult, Theodore is often hard to read. Characters have tears flow on multiple occasions, but the impact of those moments is more muted than perhaps the filmmakers meant them to be. This could be a byproduct of the mysteries of the story, but whatever the reason, it keeps the film from reaching its full potential.

    The film opens and closes with Elgort, but Fegley is arguably the more interesting of the two Theodores. He is given the responsibility of determining the mindset of the character, and he’s more than up to the task. Kidman, Wright, and Wolfhard are each fantastic in their respective roles, despite the latter being saddled with a questionable Russian accent. Wilson is a bit out of his depth, but he’s helped by the presence of Paulson, who elevates a one-note character.

    While perhaps not the surefire Oscar bet that might be expected of an adaptation of a Pulitzer Prize winner, The Goldfinch is nevertheless an enthralling story filled with fascinating characters and great performances.

    Nicole Kidman and Oakes Fegley in The Goldfinch.

    Nicole Kidman and Oakes Fegley in The Goldfinch
      
    Photo by Macall Polay
    Nicole Kidman and Oakes Fegley in The Goldfinch.
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    Movie Review

    Halle Berry tries for a comeback in film thriller Never Let Go

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 20, 2024 | 1:44 pm
    Anthony B. Jenkins, Halle Berry, and Percy Daggs IV in Never Let Go
    Photo courtesy of Lionsgate
    Anthony B. Jenkins, Halle Berry, and Percy Daggs IV in Never Let Go.

    Halle Berry has been a bankable movie star for over 30 years, dating back to her co-starring role in the 1992 Eddie Murphy film, Boomerang. Lately, though, it feels as if the Oscar winner has been coasting on reputation alone, starring in and directing the middling Bruised, and having lead roles in the forgettable Moonfall and recent Netflix movie, The Union.

    She’s looking for a comeback of sorts in the new horror/thriller, Never Let Go. Berry plays Momma, who lives in a cabin in the woods with her two sons, Samuel (Anthony B. Jenkins) and Nolan (Percy Daggs IV). The family doesn’t have access to food other than what they can grow and catch, and it’s clear their supply is dwindling. Matters aren’t helped by the fact that anytime the three of them want to venture outside of the house, Momma insists that they tie a rope to their bodies, which only allows them to go so far.

    Momma maintains that there’s an evil presence in the forest, and if they ever let go of their ropes while outside, they will be infected by the evil. Both sons are initially shown to trust fully in their mom’s beliefs, but Nolan soon becomes skeptical and starts testing the boundaries. Is there actually evil all around them, or has Momma succumbed to a mental illness that will bring them all down eventually?

    Written and directed by Alexandre Aja, the film initially seems like it will be suspenseful, with Momma and her boys doing whatever it takes to survive, whether there is an actual evil presence or not. But after a solid start, the story starts to become repetitive, as there’s only so much you can do with one location and three characters. While their hunger plight does move the story forward to a degree, it’s not enough to make it fully engrossing.

    Then there are the standard, and somewhat silly, scares Aja throws at the audience. Apparitions that only Momma can see appear to her as zombie versions of her dead mother, father, and husband. Since they can’t see them, the boys don’t react in the slightest anytime the ghosts make an appearance, lessening the fear factor. The ghosts also have weird, snakelike tongues that they waggle in what’s supposed to be a menacing way, but the gesture is more comically weird than spooky.

    Aja lays a lot of the story on the boys’ shoulders, and even though both actors have decent professional experience at such a young age, it proves to be too much dramatic weight to put on them. The anxiety, uncertainty, and anger that they’re asked to display would be a lot to ask of much older performers, and when they’re occasionally forced into scenes alone, the film grinds to a halt.

    Berry has always been a very emotive actor, and while that has served her well in other roles, it doesn’t work at all in this film. Her character is required to be hysterical much of the time, and the lack of warmth or empathy toward the kids makes Momma less interesting. Jenkins and Daggs are good in small doses, but they’re not ready to be the actual stars of a film like this.

    It’s difficult to pinpoint exactly where Never Let Go went wrong, but a bit more information or perspectives from outside of the house might have been warranted. As it stands, the film falls flat for most of its running time, a big problem since the point of it would seem to be to make it tension-filled and scary.

    ---

    Never Let Go is now playing in theaters.

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