• _The Lost Daughter_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 2 22:06:43 2022
    I finally got rid of Peacock Prime (which managed to show
    only one out of seven Liverpool games live) and joined the
    dark side (a.k.a. Netflix). The top attraction there is
    clearly "The OA." Season one turns out to be even better
    than I could hope for and qualifies as one of the greatest
    TV series I have seen, although I haven't even finished.
    I've seen season two on bootleg DVD (Emmy Award promotion
    kits sold on ebay), and now it makes a lot more sense to
    me. More on that later.

    There are relatively few French films on Netflix, and if
    you are looking for auteurist cinema you are mostly out
    of luck. _Oxygen_, starring Melanie Laurent, is there,
    however. It is clearly one of those shot-during-COVID
    videos, with no contact required between actors. Laurent
    is strapped into a bio-pod almost the entire film. Not
    wearing any makeup, the actress manages to make this
    science fiction vehicle completely spell-binding.

    I also get to stream _The Lost Daughter_ directed by
    Maggie Gyllenhaul. She is an amazingly intelligent and
    expressive actress, and her directing debut is visually
    far more accomplished than most directed by Anglo-American
    actresses. She uses a lot of close-ups and hand-helds
    that emphasize the self-involvement of the lead character
    Leda, named after a Yeats poem and played by Olivia
    Coleman and Jessie Buckley in different time periods.
    This is particularly true in the misdirection opening
    sequence (which is also the film's end), and in blissful
    scenes during Leda's romantic youth, when she ditches
    her daughters to live with a scholar in her field of
    comparative literature. The love scene editing recalls
    _Don't Look Now_ by Nicholas Roeg, and the tactile camera
    work is reminiscent of Claire Denis. (The end credits
    clearly pay homage to Denis' mid-period style.) In
    between, the camera opens up to the sun-drenched vistas
    of the Greek beaches on the island where Leonard Cohen
    once stayed, just as Leda negotiates her place in the
    world among other reluctant young mothers who wish to
    have flings, and their husbands/admirers old and young.

    There is much to admire in the screenplay. Jessie Buckley
    is intense and fiery as the young Leda overwhelmed by the
    trials of caring for clingy young daughters while trying
    to forge an academic career *and* to carry on an affair.
    Dakota Johnson is riveting as a vacationing young mother
    and Leda's present-day double. Peter Sarsgaade (Gyllenhaul's
    husband) is magnetic as young Leda's lover, and Dagmara
    Dominczyk has a great, menacing turn as Dakota Johnson's
    aunt. The acting is really great up and down the line
    -- except for lead actress Coleman. I usually like
    Coleman but really struggle to make sense of what she is
    trying to do here. Her character is all over the place
    -- wide open, secretive, naive, guarded, generous, mean.
    At no point do I find her convincing as an academic
    living in Cambridge (teaching at Harvard? or more likely
    one of the smaller schools there?). What is this character
    like in the novel? In the end I decide that Coleman is
    just trying to play Coleman.

    The litmus test of good acting is very simple: would the
    audience be distracted into mentally recasting the role?
    Here Maggie Gyllenhaul (apparently only 3 years younger
    than Coleman) would have made a very powerful, cohesive Leda
    character. Lena Headey, whom I just saw in _The Flood_,
    would have been a very different interpretation -- via
    her patented masterclass in understatement. Maria
    Valverde is clearly too young for this role, but her
    dazzlingly work in Melanie Laurent's _Plonger_, also about
    a career woman leaving husband and daughter behind, far
    outshines Coleman's. In fact, _The Lost Daughter_ suffers
    quite a bit from comparison with _Plonger_. While both
    have the same central theme and are shot in and around
    the ocean, Gyllenhaul's film is a wistful short story
    while Laurent's is an epic poem. It is not a totally
    fair comparison, of course. Few recent films warrant
    being mentioned in the same breath as Laurent's magnum
    opus.

    Speaking of actresses who play fractured psyches --
    in Laurent's _The Mad Woman's Ball_ Lou de Laage also
    seems a different woman in every scene. But her character
    can see dead people and struggles to hold herself together,
    to appear normal so she won't be incarcerated. Coleman
    doesn't have the excuse. Laurent will both act and
    direct in _La Grande Odalisque_, which seems a more
    light-hearted fare than her usual directorial efforts.
    She should work with de Laage again soon.

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