Movie Review: A Danish photographer in the hands of ISIS, “Held for Ransom (Ser du månen, Daniel)”

True stories of kidnappings of Westerners in the Middle East are rarely resolved with heroics.

There’s little defiance by the helpless, tortured captives, rare opportunities for pithy one-liners, even if you could come up with one under such duress.

The Danish thriller “Held for Ransom,” released as “Daniel” elsewhere, is a sober, unglamorous and moving account of one man’s ordeal as he was held by the disparate Syrian factions that became known as Daesh or ISIS.

There would be no Seal Team Six coming for Daniel Rye. All he could do was endure, hope for luck because he couldn’t expect mercy from his brutal captors, and hope too that his family would come up with the ransom demanded, a ransom his government would neither help pay nor facilitate.

We meet Daniel (Esben Smed of “Summer of ’92”) on the day his life took its first blow. We see the gymnast injured at an exhibition, just before the 2012 Olympics, which he’d been training for since 2006.

He’s keenly aware that he needs to move on and find work, because his large middle class family can’t afford any more indulging of his dream. The job he finds promises its own fame. He’ll be assistant/apprentice to a Copenhagen photographer.

“Got a passport?” Sure. So he’s on a plane to Mogadishu. His new boss is a conflict photographer.

It’s when Daniel tries to pull together a freelance job on his own shortly after that that he gets in over his head. Despite hiring a guide, a driver and a bodyguard, despite sticking close to the Syrian-Turkish border, despite taking innocuous shots of civilians trying to carry on their lives in a bloody Syrian civil war, he finds himself with a gun to his head.

“Held for Ransom,” a story told in Danish, English, Arabic and French, follows Daniel’s torture at the hands of various parties, and then imprisonment with other foreigners– most of them journalists — where the torture continues as ransom demands are made and mostly left unmet.

One who shows up later in his captivity is an American journalist, James Foley (Toby Kebbell) that the CIA and others are frantically trying to locate.

But in addition to the familiar scenes of cruelty of the “sadistic monsters” holding them (carried out by four British expats nicknamed The Beatles), “Held for Ransom” tracks the efforts to get Daniel out by his family via an ex-special forces go-between (co-writer/director Anders W. Berthelsen), a man who warns his mother and father (Christiane Gjellerup and Jens Jørn Spottag) that their efforts to negotiate a release “needs to stay secret.”

They can’t tell anyone he’s been kidnapped, otherwise the terrorists will be exposed as simple criminal thugs, and not “freedom fighters” to be taken seriously. Somehow, you know Daniel’s hotheaded older sister (Sofia Torp) isn’t going to take that approach well, after she eventually and furiously finds out.

The stand-out qualities in this straight-no-chaser Middle East kidnapping thriller start with the relentless cruelty depicted. Demeaned, beaten on the soles of his feet, dragged out for “proof of life” photos, alarmed at every pound on the door and shouted “AGAINST THE WALL,” we get a serious dose of how spirits are broken in such situations. Begging for death isn’t unheard of.

“You have to EARN the right to die!”

Sympathetic performances alternately show us terrified captives and distraught and frustrated relatives, and from a terrific first act set piece where we see the risks to kidnappers when they don’t realize their new hostage is a gymnast. Smed is great at getting across an athlete with a young, nimble, highly-conditioned body and high threshold for pain improvising an escape plan the moment the slight chance of getting away presents itself.

Berthelsen makes a rugged, no-nonsense negotiator, and Torp is quite good as the sister who leaps from concerned to enraged at the lack of help her “We don’t negotiate with terrorists” government will give.

No, nothing much that turns up in “Held for Ransom” holds the possibility of surprise, even if you don’t know the true story it’s based on. It’s alarming how well most of us know the drill — the van that rolls up, the men who hustle a captive inside, the blindfolds, handcuffs, beatings and starvation that ensues.

It’s common, too, to take the aloof view that governments declare and many of us parrot whenever someone who goes into trouble spots meets this fate — “They should’ve known better than to go there.”

Daniel is the youngest of those being held — who include a Frenchman, an Italian, a Russian, an American and Spaniards, some of them journalists, some aid workers. And he is the one who repeats the conflict journalist’s credo, reminding us that they do “know better” and go anyway.

“If we don’t dare to come here, how will the world know what happens?”

Rating: unrated, violence

Cast: Esben Smed, Sofia Torp, Sara Hjort Ditlevsen, Anders W. Berthelsen, Christiane Gjellerup KochAmir El-Masry, Ardalan Esmaili and Toby Kebbell.

Credits: Directed by Niels Arden Oplev and Anders W. Berthelsen, scripted by Anders Thomas Jensen and Anders W. Bethelsen and based on a book by Puk Damsgaard. A Samuel Goldwyn release.

Running time: 2:13

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Movie Review: Junkie faces up to a tough task — “Killing Eleanor”

If Hollywood isn’t offering you the roles you want, the advice to screen actors always goes, “Write something for yourself.”

So it was with Annika Marks, a familiar face (“The World Without You,” TV’s “Goliath,” “Waco” and “The Last Tycoon”) if not a marquee name. But with “Killing Eleanor,” she’s written not just a plum role for herself — an ex-dancer/junkie trapped in the lies she’s built her life around — but a lovely curtain call part for veteran character actress Jenny O’Hara (“Mystic River,” and TV’s “The Mindy Project” and “Transparent”).

“Eleanor” is an indie dramedy with weight, biting wit and heart, a movie that generously offers meaty roles for Jane Kaczmarek and Camryn Manheim, who help this “road comedy/caper comedy” turn, on a dime, into a film of substance and one that’s kind of heartbreaking.

The end, when it comes, is rarely pretty. Eleanor’s old enough to know that. Living in a nursing home, medicated, her life prolonged in ways that make no sense to her, all she wants is control over her end.

That’s why she (O’Hara) seeks out Natalie (Marks) in Natalie’s mother’s (Kaczmarek) nail salon. Fresh from an AA meeting but still using Adderall, back to living with her parents in her 30s, lying about everything and to everyone she meets, Natalie’s at the narcissistic end of the “rehab” spectrum, wrapped up in her own mess.

And then this stranger with a nursing home ID bracelet stalks in and barks, “It’s time. You OWE me.”

An ancient IOU has come due. Yes, she knew Eleanor years ago. Her plea, spat out with a splattering of profanity, is presented as a demand.

“I want you to help me die.”

And Natalie, distracted by her family’s “intervention,” her harridan sister’s (Betsy Brandt) political campaign demands and her drug cravings, says “OK” for reasons that make no sense until you consider the bad decisions, impulse control and lies meant to cover lies way she gets through her day.

“Killing Eleanor” invites us to consider, through messed-up Natalie, whether we’d grant such a wish, and where’d we begin if we expect to go through with this. Not that we’re sure lying Natalie will.

Marks briskly sketches in Natalie’s “issues” and her family’s range of reactions to them. Mom is mistrusting behind an upbeat and supportive face, Dad (Chris Mulkey), is a doctor too distracted to dig in, and sister Anya (Brandt)? She is WAY past over Natalie’s nonsense.

We’re treated to the blizzard of lies it takes for Natalie just to get in to see Eleanor once the nursing home has taken her “home.” We see the DIY way Eleanor effects her escape and the impromptu road trip they take through the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, ostensibly to “buy drugs” in Canada, where “assisted suicide” is supposedly easier to pull off.

The dialogue is peppered with flippant cracks about death and old age, from Mom’s “if I ever get like that, shoot me” to nervous nail-biter Natalie’s many jokes about what Eleanor wants and ways Eleanor might accomplish it.

Eleanor hisses “Those things’ll kill you” about Natalie’s smoking.

Want one?”

They run out of gas, so let’s flag down a trucker. Get into a semi “with a complete stranger?”

“Maybe he’s a psycho killer and he’ll solve our problem for us.”

Better let the service station attendant fill the gas can rather than risk Natalie “soaking us all with gasoline.” Pause. “Although…”

But a stranger (Manheim) who picks them up understands their quest and puts it in perspective. Natalie’s personal journey to redemption steps to the fore and “Killing Eleanor” finds its heart.

Marks’ performance begins with a series of tics — nervous, smoking, nail-biting, ransacking the family’s vacation condo for drugs (as antic drum solos accentuate her mania) — and evolves into a sort of stages-of-death-and-dying “acceptance.” Nice and subtle.

And O’Hara’s Eleanor travels from grousing, bitter old woman to vamping, over-the-top Christian “sponsor” to cover up another of Natalie’s lies, and beyond — a compact, lived-in turn that never feels false.

Yes, the screenplay gives away twists and points to an obvious finale early. But Marks, O’Hara & Co. never let us forget that whether of not you wind up “Killing Eleanor,” it’s the journey, not the destination, that matters most.

Rating: unrated, drug abuse, profanity

Cast: Annika Marks, Jenny O’Hara, Jane Kaczmarek, Chris Mukley, Betsy Brandt and Camryn Manheim

Credits: Directed by Rich Newey, scripted by Annika Marks. A 1091 release.

Running time: 1:46

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Movie Review: Brit detective chases a serial killer in “Silent Hours”

The hardboiled gumshoe likes his cigars skinny, his razor dull, his women curvaceous and compliant and his sex with spanking.

Must be British.

A meandering, dawdling murder mystery two and a half bloody hours long? Must be a TV movie edited down from a British TV series.

There’s something almost but not-quite-laughable about “Silent Hours,” a plodding, newfangled/old-fashioned thriller about a lady killer Royal Navy vet who swears that all these women who keep getting cut up are not dying by his hand. Because he’s not that kind of lady-killer.

Women throw themselves at John Duvall (James Weber Brown of “Coronation Street” and “Detectorists”), showing off their exotic lingerie and indulging his passion position from the dog-fancier chapter of the Kama Sutra.

Also very British?

“Silent Hours” — it takes its title from “Navy slanguage” for nighttime on a ship — has lots of exotic underwear, lots of sex and a dash of death. It’s built around a hero with “a past” and absolutely no scruples about whom he beds.

In 2002 Portsmouth, the quintessential “Navy town,” Duvall spies on cheating spouses for a fee. One client might be a fish factory owner. Another is a ship’s commander (Hugh Bonneville).

We meet him in therapy where a shrink (Indira Varma) questions his Navy record and his “voyeuristic” line of work and wonders what it’s done to him. As the story jumps back and forth between “sessions” and his detective work on the docks, ships, seaside and old fortifications of Portsmouth.

I mean, if you could stage a meeting with a “source” on an old gun emplacement nibbled over by llamas, wouldn’t you?

As clients, or their wayward wives, start dying, Duvall starts snooping around, even if he’s not letting anybody see the concern setting in. The coppers (Dervla Kirwan) smile and start looking at Duvall as a suspect.

“Are you withholding evidence from a police murder investigation, Mr. Private Peeping Tom Detective?”

Maybe. As the bodies pile up — including Duvall’s girlfriend (Elizabeth Healey), he starts to sweat. Well, he would, if it wasn’t so damned cold.

Turning a three-episode TV series into a movie isn’t unheard of. But this editing job results in a lurching, convoluted thriller that never gets on its feet and up to speed.

Here’s a newspaper reporter “source,” and an old friend whose radio expertise might help decipher an old answering machine tape. Introduced and forgotten. There’s an old girlfriend who gets “flashes” and senses things from people and objects. Supernaturalism? On top of everything else?

The film has a vivid sense of place, with all the gulls and crisp mornings and fish.

But the “Portsmouth Ripper” case that should grip the city never delivers suspense or much that I’d call a mystery, even though it is a favorite British TV genre and thus, they should be good at it. All involved got lost in the salacious — sex and sex and sex — and never come up for air.

“She certainly has a thing for naughty underwear.”

“Silent Hours” is a lot of stuff about Naval procurements, undersea stashes, real estate, troubled pasts and double entendres and women throwing themselves at a grizzled, 50ish retired sailor.

Very film noir, to be sure. But not set in 2002. Maybe in 1952 this would fly.

Rating: violent imagery, sex, profanity

Cast: James Weber Brown, Susie Amy, Dervla Kirwan, Indira Varma and Hugh Bonneville

Credits: Scripted and directed by Mark Greenstreet. A Gravitas Ventures release.

Running time: 2:36

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Movie Preview: Terror is close, very close — “They’re Outside”

Oct. 29 this supernatural thriller comes our way.

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Netflixable? Teens hate it when “There’s Someone Inside Your House”

The movie production instincts are on the money, as far as “There’s Someone Inside Your House” goes. Every generation needs its “Scream,” so let’s adapt YA novelist Stephanie Perkins’ book and get it on Netflix where all the YAs’ll see it.

That’s why the biggest names on this project were producers James Wan, the “Saw/Conjuring/Malignant” horror mogul, and Shawn Levy (“Free Guy”).

The movie? Well, it’s a “Scream” knockoff, all right. “Scream” without the horror movie jokes. “Scream” with a lot less terror. “Scream” without much we could call “fun.”

It’s not half bad. But it’s not quite half-good, either.

In Osborne, Nebraska, the parents and their kids are all about corn, “God, His game (football) and his glory.”

That’s what a football player (Zane Clifford) sings through the tears — the Osborne High fight song — in tribute to his dead teammate (Markian Tarasiuk) whom we’ve seen trapped in his house and butchered in the somewhat blase opening scene.

The school and even the town are littered with suspects. But it’s not until a second death that anybody gets truly concerned.

That’s a big of-its-moment take-away from “There’s Someone Inside Your House.” This is America today, and school and football must go on — violence, pandemic, attempted coup, crisis actors invading school board meetings be damned.

The “outcast” kids — Makani (Sydney Park), her BFF Alex (Asjha Cooper), trans pal Darby (Jesse LaTourette), rich kid Zach (Dale Whibley) and Rodrigo (Diego Josef) have their theories. Everybody in school does.

But as classmates keep dropping, their “secrets” exposed on email blasts just as they’re hacked up by a nut-with-a-knife in a mask (custom made to match the victim’s face) and hoodie, the “whodunit” here never gets traction. We’re all distracted by the “secrets.”

No, not the gay footballer or the trans teen. Everybody knows them. It’s the “secret” bullying, the hazing rituals that got out of hand, the closeted white supremacist and the nervous kid on medication who have something to worry about.

Whatever the virtues of the source novel, screenwriter Henry Gayden and director Patrick Brice (“Creep,” “The Overnight”) miss a lot of opportunities to riff on this latest “Me” generation and its excesses.

Surely the student council president (Sarah Dugdale) isn’t the only one who makes this tragedy, and the organized mourning for it, all about “her.”

“There’s Someone” can be praised for its inclusion. A Pacific Islander lead (Park), a gay kid, a trans kid, the Hispanic classmate, the brassy African-American who gets to declare “I’m DONE talking about who I think did it. I KNOW who did it!” But when you do little with the characters, or with who they “represent,” your movie looks an awful lot like “checkbox casting.” You’re populating your picture with “types,” not people.

Even the set piece murders — in a cathedral, in a “secrets” party where the kids are to reveal their secrets and thus disempower the killer, in a corn maze — all play as flat, like a balloon that the air went out of just before “ACTION!”

That makes the entire enterprise feel like, well, an “enterprise,” a thriller “produced,” not cleverly scripted or directed, or compellingly acted.

Rating: TV-MA, bloody violence, drug use, sexual situations, profanity

Cast: Sydney Park, Asjha Coooper, Jesse LaTourette, Théodore Pellerin, Dale Whibley, Sarah Dugdale

Credits: Directed by Patrick Brice, scripted by Henry Gayden, based on the novel by Stephanie Perkins. An Atomic Monster film on Netflix.

Running time: 1:36

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Movie Review: Getting the awful word out via “The Auschwitz Report”

Before the term “Shoah” was coined, before “Holocaust” was became the worldwide term for the mass murder of European Jews, Gypsies, Slavs and homosexuals of many races, the “denial” was well-established.

Then, as now, Nazis pretended the murder of millions wasn’t happening. And the world, ready to believe human beings couldn’t do this to other human beings, clung to that denial. Even the International Red Cross was slow up on the uptake — tricked, fooled and conned by the German regime that carried out the slaughter.

The Auschwitz Report” is a gripping, myopic and sober-minded Czech/Slovak co-production about two men who kept count of the “transports” coming in, noting how many were “blown…through the chimneys” of Auschwitz-Birkenau, and wrote it down.

They drew diagrams, maps of the complex.

They stole labels of Zyklon B, the pesticide developed from a banned WWI gas that Germans and their minions used to suffocate millions with infamous “German efficiency.”

And in 1944, they escaped and attempted to bring this news, their proof, to the world.

Slovak filmmaker Peter Bebjak, who did the thriller “The Line” and has numerous Slovak and Czech TV credits, hurls us into Auschwitz, into the harrowing existence of “scribes” Rudolph Vrba (Peter Ondrejicka) and Alfréd Wetzler (Noel Czuczor). No back story to speak of, just nightmares built on the waking nightmare of their borrowed time in this most infamous death camp of all.

Bebjak and his fellow screenwriters sketch in the people, Jews and Gypsies, a Franciscan friar (Jan Nedbal) and their Nazi tormentors (Florian Panzner, Lars Rudolph, Christoph Bach) and all but bury their characters and themselves in the vast, anonymous killing machine of Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Because that’s what this movie is about, a machine no one in the world would believe existed. Wetzler and Valer (Vrba’s real name was Walter Rosenberg) were a mismatched pair — one given to weeping and despairing, the other stoically cool and determined to succeed, to get word (in Czech, Slovak and English) of this place to the Allies so that “important people will send planes and blast this place into oblivion.”

With so many Holocaust stories, so many filmed accounts of the horrors of the camps, Bebjak found his fresh angle by focusing not just on the peril of the escapees — hidden under lumber palettes by fellow inmates — but of those threatened, tortured and summarily shot for not giving up their location.

The Franciscan — imprisoned for reasons never explained — is among those tormented by Lausmann (Panzner), another in a long line of Germanic sadists, this one given to lashing out on hearing he’s lost a son on The Russian Front by having prisoners buried up to their necks so that he can bludgen them at will, or ride his horse over their exposed skulls.

Lausmann and other officers keep the inmates of the same barracks as the escapees outside, standing, starving in the April cold, for a day and night as he interrogates, beats and even shoots those selected for questioning.

No one talks.

“The Auschwitz Report” includes some wrenching choices the men in that barracks face, and an emotional rendition of the unthinkable — two men escaping from the slaughter, getting help from locals (by the spring of 1944, civilians had to figure the jig was up for the Aryan goose-steppers) and trying to convince a skeptical Red Cross official (John Hannah of “Four Weddings and a Funeral”) of their proof.

The film’s third act is somewhat anti-climactic, even if it does have the novelty of being among the few depictions of how hard it was to convince the world this was going on.

Czuczor, Ondrejicka and Panzner sketch in their characters as best they can. But this Slovakian submission for the Best International Film Oscar focuses more on broad strokes, on recreating horrific history and on doing it justice.

That narrow focus is both a strength and a shortcoming of “The Auschwitz Report.” Yet it’s still a piece of “never forget” history we haven’t seen before, and its closing credits — a sea of intolerant voices, from Hungary, Brazil and Mar-a-Largo — underscore the fear that “it’s happening again” and the need to change history, while we still can.

Rating: unrated, graphic violence, nudity

Cast: Noel Czuczor, Peter Ondrejicka, Florian Panzner, Jan Nedbal, Lars Rudolph, Christoph Bach and John Hannah

Credits: Directed by Peter Bebjak, scripted by Peter Bebjak, Tomás Bombík and Jozef Pastéka, inspired by the memoir by Alfred Wetzler. A Samuel Goldwyn release.

Running time: 1:34

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Movie Preview: The latest from the director of “Tangerine” and “The Florida Project” — “Red Rocket”

A dramedy about a porn star who comes home to his small town?

This one opens in Dec.

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Movie Preview: An indie Western about a woman wronged — “The Flood”

This one earns limited release Nov. 2.

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Movie Review: A Grim Fairy Tale from Iceland — “Lamb”

A parable about parenting and a grim fairytale about grief and the Natural Order of Things, “Lamb” might be the oddest film you settle in for this year.

Special effects technician turned director Valdimar Jóhannsson conjures up an Icelandic story both bizarre and familiar, a piece of folklore both ancient and creepily current. It’s a gloomy, provocative tone poem of life, death, fog and sheep.

This Swedish/Norwegian/Polish production is about a farm couple (Noomi Rapace and Hilmir Snær Guðnason) as unchanging as the overcast skies on their corner of the coast. So entrenched are their routines — tending sheep and the gear it takes to run the farm — that they don’t talk a lot.

Their first words are downbeat lunchtime banter about a news story about the possibilities of time travel.

“I like it fine in the here and now,” Ingvar says, shutting down that chat.

“This year is better than last year” Maria says, trying again later.

“Which makes it better than the year before,” he says, shutting that down as well.

But as they busy themselves helping their ewes give birth in the barn, one lamb’s difficult arrival gives them pause. They exchange a look. And the next thing we know, Maria is hand feeding it and tucking it into a metal tub converted to a bed in their bedroom.

Ingvar? He seems to ponder this for a bit, and then fetch a baby’s crib out of storage. “Ada” is going to be sleeping in their room, long term. Ada will be joining them for meals.

Something was missing from their lives, possibly taken from them. And now they have a replacement.

But the unease we feel about all this is compounded by memories of the film’s opening scene. Something taking growling breaths stalking through the fog, scaring off a herd of ponies and getting the wide-eyed, panicked attention of the sheep in the barn.

The trusty sheep dog growls and whines, expressing his own unease, and not just as this odd living arrangement his people have settled into.

And that ewe bleating at their window? You can guess whose birth mother she is.

It takes an untimely visit from Ingmar’s musician-brother (Björn Hlynur Haraldsson) to broach the subject of this New Normal his brother and sister-in-law have adopted, that includes reading bedtime stories and taking baths with Ada.

They’re “playing house with that animal,” and need reminding. “It’s not a child!”

You have to get past the bizarre premise and shed any notion that what you’re seeing is a conventional horror movie and accept “Lamb” on its own terms, the way Maria and Ingvar expect brother Pétur to accept their “blessing.”

Jóhannsson maintains a chilling mood even as the viewer runs through every fable in our collective memory and figures out where this is going.

Only we don’t. Not entirely. The script’s surprises are mostly subtle, its “twists” just to the left or right of our expectations about how this “unnatural” tale plays out.

The acting, too, is subtle — reserved. Whatever this trio work out between them, it probably won’t involve shouting or shooting. Then again…

That understatement and the lack of big frights make “Lamb” a chiller you appreciate more than embrace, ponder more than wholly understand.

Whatever transpires or is left unexplained, Jóhannsson never loses track of the mood he sets out to establish, that of a frosty folk tale that suggests that not everything we do to cope with grief is healthy, acceptable and should be dressed up as a little girl.

Rating: R for strong bloody images, sexuality/nudity.

Cast: Noomi Rapace, Hilmir Snær Guðnason and Björn Hlynur Haraldsson.

Credits: Directed by Valdimar Jóhannsson, scripted by Sjón and Valdimar Jóhannsson. An A24 release.

Running time: 1:46

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Movie Review: “Sweet Thing” comes of age in a broken home

“Sweet Thing,” the latest film from veteran indie filmmaker Alexandre Rockwell is an ambling, self-consciously arty and yet utterly conventional coming-of-age drama starring his children, Lana and Nico.

If you only remember his breakthrough film, 1992’s wry “In the Soup,” it can feel like a departure. But considering the quixotic filmography that followed — “13 Moons,” “Louis & Frank,” “Pete Smalls is Dead” — and the fact that his largely unseen previous film (“Little Feet”) also starred his kids, “Sweet Thing” fits that artist-groping-for-a-story-and-a-means-of-filming-it cliche.

Because this dreamy drift through a troubled childhood traffics in cliches.

Billie (Lana Rockwell) was named for Billie Holiday, and she sings and plays the ukulele. She’s a young teen who is the primary caregiver of her little brother Nico (Nico Rockwell).

That’s because Dad (Will Patton) staggers from pocket-change job to pocket change job. Literally. He’s a drunk, and gets money for booze if not food for his kids by wearing a panda suit for a Chinese restaurant.

“I got you a treat,” he slurs in a more sober moment. “Don’t ask me where I got it. That’s between me and the surveillance camera!”

Mom ditched them, so Billie and Nico are scrambling to sell stuff — aluminum cans, an old toilet — for cash, or drum up business for a local used tire shop by sticking nails under parked cars.

This impoverished corner of suburban, coastal Massachusetts where they live (New Bedford was the filming location) has rocky beaches and slums, and the junkyards are full of boats.

Billie has visions of an older woman and the security she symbolizes. Grandma? Maybe. Because we meet Mom (Karyn Parsons), and she’s moved on. Vague “we’ll get together” promises are all she offers. Dad’s confrontations with her new man, Beaux (M.L. Josepher) aren’t helpful.

There’s a hint of something even darker than the alcoholism that haunts their father. Is he abusive? And when they finally end up staying with Mom when Dad gets locked up to sober up, those worries are renewed. Beaux is a bully, among other failings.

Luckily, they have a new friend, Malik (Jabari Watkins) to goof around with, and when the chips are down, count on if they have to run away. He’s sweet on Billie and her curly blonde locks.

Rockwell immerses us in the sort of warm “poverty porn” that such films too-often traffic in. “The Florida Project” and “Beasts of the Southern Wild” managed that “a romanticized child’s view of down and out” far better.

Here, the threats to childhood come from every direction, yet the kids can’t quite be stirred from their waking dream. They swim, wander, struggle and bond.

Rockwell stages some grimly realistic moments of adult humiliation — their father’s and their mother’s.

Mostly, he’s just filming kids being kids — walking railroad tracks, climbing onto abandoned boats, sitting in a dimly-lit hovel singing or picking out a tune.

He shot in black and white and uses old fashioned iris-in/iris-out transitions at times, reinforcing this “dream of childhood” idea.

To be honest, that’s not enough.

“Sweet Thing” starts from natural empathy at the sight of seeing kids struggling, but refuses to grapple with that.

The few way stations on this overly-familiar wander through “picaresque” don’t make you feel much of anything, just a vague sense that “Oh, that’s pretty” and “that scene was nice” from “there’s no food in the house” to intimations of molestation, all the way to Rockwell’s cop out of an ending.

The kids are generally unaffected and “real,” the setting is novel and the black and white heightens to sense of “grit” even if this is far from “gritty.” “Sweet Thing” just never amounts to much that’s sweet, or magical or tragic or sad.

Rating: unrated, violence, sexual abuse

Cast: Lana Rockwell, Nico Rockwell, Jabari Watkins, Karyn Parsons, M.L. Josepher and Will Patton.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Alexandre Rockwell. A Film Movement release.

Running time: 1:31

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