Edmonton Journal

A tale of quiet desperatio­n

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com

CASTLE IN THE GROUND ••• out of 5

Cast: Alex Wolff, Imogen Poots, Neve Campbell

Director: Joey Klein

Duration: 1 h 45 m

Available: On demand

They say misery loves company, but the fact is most things enjoy like-minded companions­hip. Joy loves company. Loss loves company. Addiction loves company.

That last emotional transactio­n is at the heart of Castle in the Ground, a dark new drama from Canadian actor and now writer-director Joey Klein. It’s set in Sudbury, Ont., in 2012, with the opioid crisis on its way to becoming front-page news in Canada.

Alex Wolff (Hereditary) stars as 19-year-old Henry, his young life on hold as he cares for his single mother (Neve Campbell), who is dying of cancer. His rituals include driving her to appointmen­ts, managing her medication and occasional­ly praying — though the sense is that he’s operating more out of habit than faith.

He also has a girlfriend, barely seen. Clearly his mom’s needs supersede anyone else’s, including his own.

But when she dies, he finds himself drawn into the orbit of his new neighbour Ana (Imogen Poots), a troubled young woman he first notices at the pharmacy trying to score some methadone.

As Henry starts self-medicating with the remains of his mom’s pain medication­s, Ana sees him as a means to an end, what with his access to a working cellphone, an automobile, drugs, a bit of cash — all the things she wants/needs but can’t have. What does he get from her? Let’s just say that codependen­cy loves company.

Klein shoots his feature not directly from Henry’s point of view, but keeps the camera close to the main character, with the result that we see things through his narrow, slightly naive perspectiv­e. It makes Henry’s descent more understand­able, as are his half-hearted efforts to pull himself free from this life before it consumes him.

The film, which screened at several festivals last fallmakes a detour from dour drama into thriller territory in the final act. But it’s not enough to sink this cautionary tale, which asks a disturbing question: When misery finally decides to part company, how does it manage to let go?

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