Total Film

Cinema reviews

The look of love…

- Kevin Harley

Sisters are doing it for themselves in Carol, The Dressmaker, Grandma and Mockingjay – Part 2. The chaps kick ass in SPECTRE, The Last Witch Hunter and Bridge Of Spies. Some more successful­ly than others...

He used to make bracing art-core films, but Todd Haynes and classic Hollywood style have got a thing going now. After riffs on Citizen Kane ( Velvet Goldmine), Douglas Sirk ( Far From Heaven) and noir/melodrama (TV’s Mildred Pierce remake), Haynes is a perfect fit for Carol, crafted from writer Phyllis Nagy’s long-nurtured adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel The Price Of Salt. A romance so gorgeously played its riches seem effortless, Haynes’ movie is a ravishing seduction in a vintage mould: stealthy, swooning cinema to relish.

The director’s control is clear the moment he segues from the title sequence across rainy ’50s Manhattan streets to a charged restaurant encounter: all rhyming gestures, loaded looks, suggestive words. An innocent “Likewise” drips with feeling. We flash back in time, to department-store attendant Therese (Rooney Mara) locking eyes with married mother Carol (Cate Blanchett). Attraction sparks across the dead-eyed china-doll floor: one “leave the glove behind” ruse later, love blooms.

Carol’s estranged husband and repressive ’50s America complicate matters, but Haynes avoids heated melodrama. With slow-burn focus, he zeroes in on Carol/Therese to show how love emerges from a grey backdrop to consume them, a contrast beautifull­y conveyed by the film’s style. Departing from Far From Heaven’s sumptuous flushes, Haynes and DoP Ed Lachman sketch emotional currents in smoke-stained sepia with flashes of red, like an Edward Hopper painting pulsing with yearning; Carter Burwell’s score moons to their tune. The to-die-for cast tune in too, etching character studies in fine detail. Blanchett’s full-bore charisma – total Bette Davis – nails how tough a to-be-divorced mum in the ’50s would have to be, yet she somehow taps reserves of feeling for later shows of tenderness and turmoil. At another extreme, Mara’s inscrutabl­e reserve makes sense of a young woman trying to find herself, on alert for a revelatory return gaze through those popping eyes (she’s a would-be photograph­er – looking means everything here). On the fringes, Sarah Paulson exudes savvy in the best friend role and Kyle Chandler imbues a potentiall­y hateful hubby with caricature-busting conviction.

Some jolting shocks on a Christmas road trip are the closest Carol comes to Highsmith’s twisty Mr. Ripley mode. Otherwise, everything from a sensitive sex scene to an agonising custody battle orbits around Carol and Therese’s intense attraction with an understate­d focus so sure, you hardly even notice its hypnotic hold until the grip releases at the sublime climax. “You’re in a trance,” Therese is told. Likewise.

‘The to-die-for cast etches character studies in fine detail’

THE VERDICT Under Haynes’ sure hand, Blanchett and Mara deliver a love story to melt to. Every glance means something, no strain shows: it’s filmmaking as natural as breathing. › Certificat­e 15 Director Todd Haynes Starring Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara, Kyle Chandler, Jake Lacy, Sarah Paulson Screenplay Phyllis Nagy Distributo­r Studio Canal Running time 119 mins

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