Movie Review: Adrift in the Working Class Underbelly of Oz — “Flathead”

“Flathead” is an Australian docudrama peek into the country’s hidden-in-plain-sight underclass.

It takes its title from a popular fish Down Under, one of the foodstuffs we see processed, picked, packed and prepared by the migratory workers of many cultures, a job sector in crisis, an opening title tells us.

But it’s mainly about a lonely old man who has lived hard (addiction) and lost much (two children) and returned to Bundaberg, a small city skirting the east central coast of Queensland.

We see high-mileage, chain-smoking Cass Cumerford at the church dance, in the local pubs, catching up with old friends and connecting with evangelical new ones. And we see him naked, in bed alone, as alone as he was when he laid down for a CAT Scan.

Cass has come home for reasons he keeps to himself. Perhaps it’s his idea of his last stop, with some hope of atonement, forgiveness or what have you.

He is hopeful about an afterlife even as he’s sure heaven is divided into “bloody sections,” a point he debates with a religious zealot traveling the country in a Jesus slogans decorated van.

But writer-director Jaydon Martin’s film is less direct than that, more ethereal and of a-place-in-time snapshot variety. A tale told in vignettes that end with blackouts, some of them set to a cappella hymns, it’s “Vernon, Florida” without the wit.

We drift into those bars and churches, witness a brawl with a mob egging the brawlers on, see Cass denied entrance at one joint, and hang with a bunch of gun nut rubes given to making homophobic cracks about each other in lieu of giving a second thought to who and what they are and why they think and do what they do.

We meet a father-and-son who own and run the Busy Bee Fish Bar, and follow would-be physical fitness influencer son Andrew Wong — a college grad — as he goofily videos and narrates his exercise and diet regimen. We spy Andrew watching the ‘sordid-for-its-day 50s classic “Baby Doll” on the telly.

And we travel with him as he joins a social worker (I guess) who heads out to meet and greet Vietnamese, Thai and vegetable pickers from all over Asia in the lcoal fields.

“Andrew’s from China,” the social worker chirps.

“F—–g s–t,” Andrew protests in his best Bogan. “Aye wuz BORN in BundaBERG, you DORK!”

The lives themselves are interesting, even if we only get a glimpse of them, even Cass’s. But truth be told this never really ties the Cass story to the immigrant story (he did the same sort of work in his day, we surmise, and might be prejudiced) and never amounts to much more than a selection of snapshots, filmed in black and white, that humanize a whole class of people Australia is doing its best to ban, and is just beginning to discover the cost of its bigotry.

Rating: unrated, violence, profanity, slurs

Cast: Cass Cumerford, Andrew Wong, Rob Sheean, Hayden Rimmington and Kent Wong.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Jaydon Martin. An Indiepix streaming release.

Running time: 1:29

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Netflixable? Clooney’s a Movie Star who Takes Stock of his Career’s Cost — “Jay Kelly”

An aging matinee idol has his long, dark “tribute reel” of the soul in “Jay Kelly,” a George Clooney star vehicle that one-ups “first world problems” and “rich white people problems” with “movie star problems.” It’s a wealthy, famous star’s “What was it all for?” reckoning that reaches for ironic tears and never quite shakes the irony.

What writer/director Noah Baumbach and co-writer (and co-star) Emily Mortimer serve up is essentially a two hour and twelve minute rationalization of every “laundry list” acceptance speech in Hollywood history.

“I’d like to thank my agent, my manager, my stylist, my accountant…”

Those faceless names recited at awards shows? They’re real people. They’re “family.” Got it?

But “Jay Kelly” that never overcomes the sense that it’s just a well-paid working European vacation for cast and crew where Clooney gets to play a star no longer comfortable with his stardom in a movie shot close to his Italian villa.

So, tone deaf? A tad.

Clooney has the title role, that of a 60 year old star whose appeal has started to fade, along with his “quote.” He’s still making pictures back to back to back while he’s in demand, still has a “team” to manage his schedule, salary negotiations and image — headed by his manager (Adam Sandler), his publicist (Laura Dern) and his go-to stylist (Mortimer) to touch up his grey and Sharpie in black streaks for his eyebrows for any appearance that might involve cameras.

We catch up to the whirlwind of his life and work just as he’s finishing up a cop thriller. He manages a death scene which includes a big speech and a Jack Russell terrier who’s got to wander up to him on cue. Jay tries to coax the director out of another take, but gets talked out of it.

Everybody on the set applauds as “That’s a wrap for Jay Kelly” on this shoot, and we get our first sense that this ballyhoo’d holiday picture with “Awards contender” pretensions isn’t all that.

The movie within a movie is nothing anybody would want to see. The “big scene” is neither emotional nor amusing.

And Kelly’s right arm, his always-on-the-phone, juggling that next deal, arranging that flight, trying to get him to show up for a Tuscan film festival tribute, the mensch who’s always reassuring him he’s “a good person” and a “great star,” his loving “best friend” and manager, Ron, is played by Adam Sandler, the David Spade of Chevy Chases.

Ron’s the guy who tells Jay that “Pops,” the British filmmaker (Jim Broadbent) who gave him his big break, has died. That prompts a flashback to our first clues that Jay Kelly may not fit his “image.” His last meeting with aged Peter saw the old man begging him to sign on to one last movie together and Jay smiling and charming his way to “I can’t.”

There’s a daughter (Grace Edwards) ready to start college but taking off with friends for a rich kid’s version of backpacking through Europe as workaholic Jay heads off to his next project. Another daughter (Riley Keough) by an earlier mother is a San Diego pre-school teacher semi-estranged from the dad “who was never there” and who hasn’t corrected that to this day.

“Is there a person in there?”

There’s an aged dad (Stacy Keach, delightful in his dotage) Jay barely speaks to.

But none of this matters, as he has all these people paid to be his “family.”

Until, that is, Jay runs into an old acting school chum (Billy Crudup) at mentor Peter’s funeral. Tim knew Jay back when Tim was the handsome “Method” star-in-the-making who wound up abandoning acting to become a child therapist. As he’s pretty sure Jay “stole my life” in the way he got his “big break,” that’s Jay’s excuse to ditch the super expensive next film, tear his “team” away from their families and take the private jet to Europe so that he can spend more time with the one daughter he’s close to and maybe accept that Tuscan festival tribute in the bargain.

But the fact that Jay and Tim got into a fistfight in a bar parking lot — with cell phone video destined to “go viral” — is perhaps the best reason of all to flee the country and be feted by foreigners and film fans.

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Classic Film Review: A Theatrical Cold War Anecdote turned TV Bon Bon — “An Englishman Abroad”

An actress on tour with “Hamlet” is “recruited” by Britain’s most notorious spy in 1950s Moscow in “An Englishman Abroad,” a delightfully droll tragi-comedy from the writer who gave us “The Madness of King George,” “The Lady in the Van” and this year’s “The Choral.”

It’s a true story, or true enough. Posh, upper crust, Cambridge gay blade turned British Intelligence officer Guy Burgess fled to Moscow upon being outed. And a drunken, exiled Burgess went out of his way to meet actress Coral Browne when the Old Vic’s latest “Hamlet” reached the U.S.S.R., as totalitarian Red Russia branded itself back then.

Put that anecdote in the ear of one of the British theater, TV and film’s greatest modern wits — Alan Bennett — and it became a John Schlesinger (“Midnight Cowboy”) TV movie for the ages starring Alan Bates as Burgess, Browne (“The Ruling Class,” “The Night of the Generals”) as herself and Bond-villain/”Rocky Horror” “criminologist” and narrator Charles Gray.

Burgess was the most famous member of the “Cambridge Five” spy ring who infiltrated British intelligence during World War II and served the Soviets until they were exposed in the early years of the Cold War. He defected in 1951.

We meet him drunk and dozing off at a touring “good will” British production of “Hamlet” in Moscow in 1958. He barges into Browne’s dressing room during intermission. She was playing Queen Gertrude opposite Gray’s usurper/poisoner King Claudius, an actor Burgess tipsily badgered several stern Soviet female theater functionaries to see backstage.

“We were at Cambridge together!”

The jokes begin with his muttering about at long last hearing a better language than Russian and the most eloquent words ever written in English to other patrons as he stumbles out of the theatre. Was he “friends” with Hamlet or Claudius? Both, it turns out. “I was at Cambridge with Hamlet!” he later insists out of vanity.

Hamlet, by the way, is played by Mark Wing-Davey of “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” fame. In real life, the theater troupe’s Hamlet was Michael Redgrave, also a college friend of Burgess.

Burgess throws up in Browne’s dressing room sink, charms her with his boorishness, cadges booze and English smokes.

“Craven A, for your throat’s sake,” he sighs with pleasure at the memory of finer tobacco.

Browne is bowled over, not sure who he is or why there’s a young man tailing him whom she catches listening at a keyhole.

“I’m in a French farce!”

But after the curtain call, she confers with her Claudius (who is never mentioned by his real name, Mark Dignam), who confirms who Burgess was and that he did indeed know Burgess in university as they traveled in the same (theatrical and gay) circles.

“Oh I used to run across him…years ago..the way one does.”

It turns out Burgess isn’t done with Browne. He sends her a note inviting her to lunch. It takes a day of walking, questioning Russians who don’t understand her for the address and swapping insults with a couple of young, snide foreign service officers at the British Embassy before they finally meet.

What has been a “How DOES one get street directions in a paranoid totalitarian state where you don’t speak the language” farce — “like playing ‘Private Lives’ to a Wednesday matinee in Oldham!” — tranforms into a deliciously downbeat variation of the Portrait of a Broken Man cliche.

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Movie Review: Who’s creepier, Foster Parents or “The Fostered?”

It’s a lucky thing that the thriller “The Fostered” is so risibly bad almost no one will see it and fewer will take it seriously.

If this abomination had been a hit, with competent writing and direction and compelling acting, it might have ended America’s admittedly broken foster care system overnight. Not replaced it with something better or fixed, but just ended it.

The men depicted here are drunken, cheating, abusive or mentally ill menaces and aspiring foster moms are naive at best. And the kids? Childhood trauma is a great shortcut for grooming monsters.

They don’t have to make mention of the state money changing hands part of the equation or poor state oversight pretty much nationwide legitimate problems to condemn everybody involved.

Writer-director Gunnar Garrett’s film opens with an effective if clumsily-staged crazy-dad-kills-mom-and-shoots-one-tween-twin in a Filipino-American family. Dad (Robert Adamson) had refused his pills and was literally listening to a devil in his rear view mirror (himself) as he drunkenly lashed-out against his wife (Rinabeth Apostol) and kids.

It’s no wonder the twelve-year-olds (Serena Perey and Savina Perey) are wary of the California farm they’re fostered out to.

“Reminds me of a horror film” one blurts out, basically on principle.

Farm wife Amy (Brittany Underwood) has wanted children for years, anything to take her mind off the children’s novel she’s been writing. For years.

Farmer Kevin (Robert Palmer Watkins) is indifferent to the idea, something his farm pal Matt (Casey Webb) has picked up on. Kevin’s had a fling with Amy’s “book club” bestie Heather (Jodie Garrett, the writer-director’s wife), an on-the-make femme fatale of the Jessica Rabbit school — painted on party dress, the works.

The warier twin warns “The closer you get to these people, the better the chance that they’ll hurt you!”

The “Abigail doll” toting other twelve-year old is too busy kissing up to the fosters to listen.

Or is she?

“Foreshadowing” here comes in the form of an open well Kevin never got around to sealing and a butcher knife that the girls take an early and unnatural interest in.

“Where do I put this?”

“In KEVIN!”

There are more unintentional laughs than intentional or unintentional frights. But it’d be mean to go into much detail about how they’re achieved and who achieves them.

“The Fostered” looks and sounds like what it is, a self-financed fiasco that couldn’t attract a distributor anybody had ever heard of, and with good reason.

Rating: TV 16+, violence, suicide

Cast: Brittany Underwood, Robert Palmer Watkins, Jodie Garrett, Casey Webb, and Savina Perey, Serena Perey.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Gunnar Garrett. A One Tree Enterainment release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:17

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Movie Review: Slovenia’s Hope for an Oscar? Catholic Choral “Little Trouble Girls”

“Little Trouble Girls” is a conventional girls’ coming-of-age tale whose clever twist is equating sexual awakening with spiritual awakening, at least in the eyes and ears of an impressionable teen.

Slovenia’s bid for a Best International Feature Film Oscar covers what would pass for overly familiar ground in many other culture’s cinemas. But visual reveries and poetic touches unique to its setting lift it above many similar tales, which also use a pop song (in this case by Sonic Youth) as their title.

Lucia, played by wide-eyed ingenue Jara Sofija Ostan, is the new girl at her Catholic school. It’s as cliqueish as any high school, but perhaps one way to fit in would be to join the choir.

That’s where she meets Ana-Maria (Mina Svajger) and her besties Karla and Ursula. They’re into lipstick, gossiping about sex, making jokes about the dorky choirmaster (Sasa Tabakovic) and playing “Truth or Dare.”

But it’s established early on that Lucia isn’t like that, or so her mother (Natasa Burger) insists. She’s too young to wear the lip gloss her aunt sent her from Paris, too naive to run with a fast crowd. And she’s prone to daydreaming, which gets her in trouble in choir, and perhaps beyond that.

Ana-Maria may seem mild by any modern Western teen’s archetype of what constitutes “growing up too fast.” She’s more talk than “experience” and still adheres to her grandma’s form of teen penance — forcing herself (and Lucia) to chew green/sour grapes for any perceived “sin.” But she’s assertive, pushy and down for doing anything she can to distract from the braces that give away her “awkward” years.

Everything comes to a head on road trip to a choral concert competition which entails a stay at an Ursuline Convent. The convent is undergoing renovations. There are brawny young workers.

You can guess some of what’s to come but still guess wrong as often as not as director and co-writer Urska Djukic recognizes the script is trafficking in coming-of-age cliches. Twisting some of those tropes doesn’t just create surprises. Djukic gets at something almost profound in the nature of self-discovery, which can be not just sexual or spiritual, but both at the same time.

Lucia is “tested” by oncoming adulthood. She’s responsible for staying focused and doing good work. As far as sex goes, she has lots of questions, at least some of which this adult or that one — a nun in one case — will try and probably fail to answer. And those questions don’t make a life of chastity, community, teamwork and sacred singing sound as unappealing as the conventions of these movies usually suggest.

There’s something to be said for looking for an easy escape from the world of hormones. Not that even that is an “answer.”

Ostan registers layers of puzzlement over the mysteries that Lucia ponders, with Djukic’s closeups of her and her experiences and reveries suggesting something ethereal in life choices made at an age where Hollywood comedies obsess over who to lose one’s virginity to. That’s not enough to render this largely conventional drama transcendent, but it is enough to recommend it.

Rating: nudity, sexual situations

Cast: Jara Sofija Ostan, Mina Svajger, Natasa Burger and
Sasa Tabakovic

Credits: Directed by Urska Djukic, scripted by Urska Djukic, Marina Gumzi and Maria Bohr. A Kino Lorber release.

Running time: 1:29

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Movie Preview: Milla and her Stunt Team are back in Action — “Protector”

I first interviewed Milla Jovovich way back at the beginning of her career, that “Return to the Blue Lagoon” exploitation picture.

She was 16 when she made that, a model and reasonably self-possessed, an elementary school drop out who picked up languages easily and who studied acting from childhood.

She married a notorious “likes’em awfully young” French filmmaker and filmed “The Messenger,” as St. Joan of Arc, with him.

A steady paycheck in action pictures followed her divorce as she made “Resident Evil” movies until the cows came home.

This looks like another Milla Mows them Down thriller, made for an off-brand distributor, with Matthew Modine as her ex-commnading officer, the one who gets to use the AI generated lines “You have no idea who you’re dealing with” and “She’s a force of nature.”

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Movie Preview: Leslie Manville has a secret, Ciarán Hinds may want a “Midwinter Break” over it

This Feb. drama pairs up two favorite character actors as a couple rocked by an admission that comes to light on a midwinter get-away to Amsterdam.

Faith is one of the things that comes between them.

This adaptation of a Bernard MacLaverty novel comes our way Feb. 20.

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Movie Review: An Animated Musical “David” for the Faithful

The early life of the lad who tended sheep, slew Goliath and became king of ancient Judah and all of the Israel according to the Hebrew Bible comes to the screen in the robust, pious and playful “David.”

The debut animated feature from faith-based Angel Studios (“Truth & Treason,” “Sound of Freedom”), which also produced the animated “King of Kings” and “Young David” TV series of a couple of years back, is a polished and beautifully animated musical with Christian pop artists Phil Wickham, Jonas Myrin andBrandon Engman and Israeli pop singer Miri Mesika pitching in on lyrics to Joseph Trapanese’s tunes.

We meet young David (Engman) as he tends his flocks outside of Bethlehem, a brave, bushy-browed Chalamet-looking lad with the guts to go up against a lion to save his sheep and a song in his heart to celebrate whenever his faith helps him overcome his fear.

“Doesn’t it make you feel more alive?” he sings, noting that anything or anyone fighting him is fighting his God as well.

But David’s family is visited by the prophet Samuel (Brian Stivale), a sage old man who is sure one particular son of the House of Jesse (his parents aren’t seen) has been “chosen by God” to be the next King of Judah. King Saul?

“His love of the crown has consumed him,” Samuel admits. “There is a darkness over the land.”

David wants nothing to do with this “chosen” business, and when he’s summoned to see Saul, his family figures word is out and a threat to the House of Saul is about to be eliminated. But all the despairing, restless king (Adam Michael Gold) wants is music to lift his spirits. David plays a lyre and croons a little Israelite pop to soothe Saul’s soul.

Then the Philistines, led by sneering, preening King Achish (Asim Chaudhry) invade and their “champion” Goliath (Kamran Nikhad) challenges Saul, his son Jonathan (Mark Jacobson) or a fighter of their choice to single combat.

No worries, David will do it!

“Imgine the biggest human you’ve ever seen,” a brother warns him.

“OK.”

“Now imagine somebody ATE him!”

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BOX OFFICE: “Freddy’s 2” could edge “Zootopia 2,” “Kill Bill” is back in the Top Ten

The weekend after Thanksgiving was traditionally a box office breather, with theaters content to feast on all thoseThanksgiving holdovers on the first weekend in December.

“Zootopia 2” and “Wicked 2” are doing well, thanks. And that might have been it for a three-day period where awards contenders would typically add limited release screens and some studios would dump pictures that had limited prospects but deserved a holiday release.

But no more. “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” blew up Thursday night and Friday, with cineplexes packing in so many showings I couldn’t get to see an awards contender or two as my closest AMC changed its showtimes between the moment I got in the car and the minute I arrived at their box office. And they didn’t even show some of the titles they had listed at their listed times. Not the biggest AMC fan, over the years.

A $29 million+ Thursday afternoon and evening and all-day Friday and big Saturday steered “Freddy’s” sequel to a $63 million weekend, per The Numbers. That handily puts it in the top spot, as Disney’s animated blockbuster “Zootopia 2” is cruising to another $43 million. That’s just 57% down from last weekend’s $100 million. It clearned the $220 million mark by midnight Sunday.

The big take for the “Freddy’s” sequel flew in the face of word of mouth, which should have lowered the turnout once the “Freddy’s” crowd figured out how awful it is.

A year peppered with pretty good to excellent horror, and this is what the dears are showing up for? Whatever. But the box office take of those Big Two is turning into a record for the traditionally slow weekend after Thanksgiving.

The dull and downbeat second half of “Wicked,” “Wicked for Good” is tallying just under $17 million for the weekend.

A new Gkids anime “kids” film with “Execution” in the title — “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution” cleared $10.1.

“Now You See Me Now You Don’t” is inexplicably still in the top five, conjuring up $3.65million. It will finish its run shy of $65, as it sits at $55 now.

And the re-release of the two halves of Tarantino’s“Kill Bill” epic (“The Whole Blood Affair”) should settle into the top ten (sixth place) with $3.25 million earned on 1200 screens.

The afterlife romance“Eternity” does better on weekdays than it does weekends, but is adding another $2.726 million worth of tickets sold to Elizabeth Olsen/Miles Teller fans

The awards contender “Hamnet” may be a period piece without Big Names in the cast (Jessie Buckley may be a big name by the time Oscar nominations are announced). But it’s opening wide this weekend and cracks the top ten at eight, where it sat all week thanks to great reviews and good word of mouth. It’s on track to clear $2.3 million.

The “Running Man” reboot hangs on the edge ($1.115) the top ten and “Predator: Badlands” has weekend legs ($1.8) that keep it in ninth.

An Indian wide release “Dhurandar,” “Rental Family,” “Fackham Hall” and “Sentimental Value” all fell outside the top ten.

The “Sisu” sequel, “Nuremburg,” “Regretting You” and “Sarah’s Oil” also exited the top ten

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Movie Review: A Beloved Child Inspires a Grand Tragedy — “Hamnet”

The greatest play in the English language was born of father and mother’s wrenching loss of their firstborn son. That’s the premise of Maggie O’Farrell’s historical novel “Hamnet,” now turned into an intimate Chloé Zhao period piece about a child’s death at a time when half the children born didn’t make it past their fifth birthday.

It’s about William Shakespeare’s home life, the earthy older woman this would-be “scholar” fell for and how they coped with a marriage neither family wanted, with the perils of 16th century childbirth and child rearing and the theatrical career demands of a glove-maker’s son labeled “useless” by his own father, but who’d become a playwright celebrated the world over, a famous figure in life and a towering one after his death.

Whatever else this film accomplishes in reminding us that parents are shattered with the loss of a child no matter what era they lose him or her, “Hamnet,” the little boy playing him (Jacobi Jupe) and Jessie Buckley’s performance as his bereft mother and wife of “The Bard of Avon” will break your heart.

Zhao, bouncing back from the Marvel “Eternals” paycheck picture/debacle, serves up a touching romance between a distracted young man of letters and a woman so attuned to nature she hunts with a pet hawk, knows the uses of every herb and tree and the incantations that go with their preparation and is thus labeled the “daughter of a witch.”

Young Will (Paul Mescal) is Latin tutor to some higher-born Stratford folk when he starts to notice the sister of the landowner (Joe Alwyn) who wanders the woods and fusses over her hawk.

Will may catch hell for being “useless, tradeless” and for putting on “airs” above his prospects by his glover-father John (David Wilmot). But he catches the wary eye of “Agnes” (as Mrs. Shakespeare, Anne Hathaway, was sometimes called) after he puts himself in her path — repeatedly — when he’s supposed to be teaching her brother’s children.

He’s not much on conversation, Shakespeare admits. “So tell me a story,” she challenges him. And so he does, that of Orpheus and Eurydice. He was instantly smitten with the ethereal Agnes. Now she’s taken with this rash lad who pretty much proposes on their second meeting.

“I must be hand-fastened to you. No one else will do.”

Her brother isn’t inclined to endorse or interfere, but his mother (Emily Watson) is thrown into a “She’s bewitched you” fury. As Anges is pregnant when all this comes out, there’s nothing for it but for Will to piece together work, write on his own time, in the evenings by the fire, and impregnate his new wife a second time.

But Agnes knows he must go to London to find his destiny. He will have to do it alone, as she fears the contagions and risks of the city more than she fears him having his head turned. Having Will around between theater seasons, teaching and wardrobing his three children to play “the wyrd (weird) sisters (witches)” from his latest play, “Macbeth,” giving stage combat lessons to his son Hamnet, will have to do.

But with plague about, his career will keep them apart at the moment Agnes needs him most.

Zhao keeps the focus of this fanciful spin on history domestic, as the story is very much told from Agnes/Anne’s point of view. Our heroine frets over omens, the dream that she will have “two children” at her bedside as she dies, struggles with her mother-in-law and loneliness in her husband’s absence, with raising their children her main focus but not the only one as she keeps home and hearth together.

Buckley makes Agnes flesh and blood and longing and fear and superstition and anxiety a woman of her era with feelings deeper those of the famously-deep female stage characters her husband was writing and young men were typically performing in drag on London stages.

Mescal gives us a Shakespeare of obsessive drive and a poet’s ear — snatching songs and phrases such as “the undiscovered country” (death) from Agnes for a soliloquy to come. This Will is callous enough to know he must write while he has the commissions, and nothing — not even tragedy — can dissaude him from the notion that the show must go on.

And young Master Jupe, playing the Orson Welles-at-10 cherub Hamnet, whose name was interchangeable with Hamlet back then the author (and director) assure us, will steal your heart. He is sensitive and brave, theatrical and noble. Jupe’s performance transcends the way the character is written to make Hamnet such a cornerstone of all their lives that it’s easy to believe his loss would be both gutting and inspiring.

The story’s third act yanks those final heartstrings as a grieving mother wonders what manner of outrage her distant husband has perpetrated on their loss by writing “The Danish Play.” We see that play anew, as Agnes might have, and Buckley makes us feel the hurt that cuts more than the Shakespeare script and the callow young player (Noah Jupe) bringing him to the stage of the Globe for the first time show.

But everything leading up to that — the curious courtship to the trauma of childbirth, Will’s world of words meeting Agnes’ mercurial feelings and folkways — is what gives that finale its heart and soul. And Buckley ensures that her character accumulates emotions, grievances, worries and trauma and that we feel all of it every time it matters.

It’s a great, understated performance. And if you forget to bring tissues with you to see her mourning her “Hamnet,” that’s on you.

Rating: PG-13, sexual content, partial nudity, deaths

Cast: Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal, Jacobi Jupe,
Olivia Lynes, Bodhi Rae Breathnach, Joe Alwyn and Emily Watson

Credits: Scriped and directed by
Chloé Zhao, based on a novel by Maggie O’Farrell. A Focus Features release.

Running time: 2:05

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