REVIEW: 'Beginners'
4 stars
Ewan McGregor, Christopher Plummer and Mélanie Laurent star in this comedy-drama about a young man rocked by two announcements from his elderly father: that he has terminal cancer and that he has a young male lover. Now playing nationwide, click for movie times and trailer.
--------------------------------------------------
"They f** you up, your mum and dad" appears to be the underlying message of Mike Mills’ Beginners, a tragicomedy that also suggests the parents aren’t entirely to blame. Through the intimate portrayal of two love stories emerges a bigger picture of society’s expectations, a reminder of the consequences of repressed homosexuality.
Mills, a graphic designer in his other life, paints, rather than points, a finger. He’s an inventive storyteller, his distinctive visual voice affording his characters silence if they require it, communicating his theme through the use of motifs, twee advertising imagery, and metaphor (in one scene Ewan McGregor’s Oliver goes to a dress-up party as Sigmund Freud). Meanwhile, Oliver’s inner turmoil is shown via conversations with his dad’s dog, and through his increasingly depressive drawings.
Like his irreverent film Thumbsucker, Mills tackles dark territory but never strays too far into melancholy. That’s also thanks to a wonderfully charming cast playing offbeat, damaged characters. McGregor is sensitive and restrained, as is Melanie Laurent as the vulnerable Anna, Christopher Plummer as a newly-outed man discovering life at 75, and Mary Page Keller as Oliver’s bored and lonely mother, prone to eccentric public displays. One quibble: the central love story’s climax is underdeveloped, and plot-wise, there are few surprises.
But Beginners is still a heartfelt and whimsical gem.
NEWS: The Doc Edge Festival Kicks Off Next Week; You Should Be Excited About That
NEWS: Kiwi Sci-Fi 'Eternity' to Premiere in Auckland at Rialto Newmarket
NEWS: Flicks Kicks Off Single Shot Screenings With 'Berberian Sound Studio'
REVIEW: 'Jingle All the Way'
REVIEW: 'Rust and Bone'
REVIEW: 'Ip Man: The Final Fight'
REVIEW: 'No'
REVIEW: 'Hyde Park On Hudson'
REVIEW: 'The Croods'
REVIEW: 'G.I. Joe 2: Retaliation 3D'
NEWS: Registration Open for Rialto Channel 48HOURS Filmmaking Challenge
WATCH: New 'Star Trek Into Darkness' Trailer
REVIEW: 'A Lady in Paris'
WIN: A Double Pass to Flicks' 'Trance' Preview Screenings in Auckland and Wellington
REVIEW: 'Jack the Giant Slayer 3D'
NEWS: More Cinema Goodness Confirmed for Autumn NZIFF Events
NEWS: And the winner of the Crispin Glover fan art competition is...
NEWS: Catch 'The Naked and Famous' Live Film For Free Online from Monday
REVIEW: 'Liberal Arts'
REVIEW: 'Broken City'
The people's comments