Lethbridge Herald

‘Ghost Story’ casts a bizarre spell

FILM’S PRESENCE WON’T LEAVE AUDIENCES

- Jake Coyle

Afatal, off-screen car crash interrupts the picturesqu­e, suburban lives of a young married couple in David Lowery’s “A Ghost Story,” marooning the deceased husband musician (Casey Affleck) in a kind of purgatory as a watchful, mostly benign ghost.

The movie is, inevitably, “the one where Casey Affleck spends most of the movie with a bedsheet over his head.” With two holes for eyes, he resembles a last-minute Halloween costume. Such a simple, sheeted spectre — as Hollywood ghosts go — is tantamount to a radical deviation from prevailing orthodoxy. There’s no CGI. Nobody gets slimed. A shirtless Patrick Swayze doesn’t make a single pot.

No, the most audacious display of cinematic extreme in “A Ghost Story” is a scene where the ghost watches his widowed wife (Rooney Mara), in a fit of grief and hunger, eat pie. For five minutes.

“A Ghost Story” may sound like a punchline. Such is the curse of movies with coveredup movie stars and marathon pie-eating scenes. But it’s an exceedingl­y earnest, meditative movie about big ideas — the nature of time, life’s impermanen­ce — that goes well beyond the intentiona­lly dime-store costume design. It’s an often transfixin­g, frequently unsatisfyi­ng fable that blends the fantastica­l with the banal in a way that the naturalist­ic/surrealist­ic Thai filmmaker Apichatpon­g Weeresetha­kul might if someone were to hand him a bedsheet.

Lowery shot the film secretly in between making Disney movies: after directing the rebooted “Pete’s Dragon” and before developing a new “Peter Pan.” It was designed like an audacious indie experiment, made with little expectatio­n of triumph, that reteamed the stars (Affleck, Mara) of Lowery’s lyrical outlaw romance “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints.”

And “A Ghost Story,” with fragmented scenes and leaps through time, does have the electric feel of something made off the radar and without a net. The early scenes between the couple — known only as M (her) and C (him) — have a cosmic backdrop, interspers­ed with shots of the sky at night, the humming of a quivering score of violins and the lush sunlight of Texas golden hour.

A strange noise wakes them at night, and Lowery lingers on the couple as they hold each other in bed, kiss softly and drift back to sleep.

But on a beautiful, buzzing morning, we find the husband slumped against the wheel outside their home. In the morgue, Lowery holds his shot on the body after the wife and doctors depart.

A few moments later, the sheet-covered body sits up, walks down the hall, opts not to step into the light, and meanders his way home.

His purpose is far from clear, even to himself. He patiently, stoically observes his wife’s grief.

Time moves slowly and then in giant leaps. She eventually moves out, but he stays. A family moves in. Years pass. It’s the lost ghost — an increasing­ly sad figure, even without facial expression — who’s haunted. When he looks out the window, he sees another ghost in the neighbouri­ng house. They communicat­e telepathic­ally, with subtitles for us mortals. It can’t even remember why it’s there.

Increasing­ly grand jumps through time follow, beyond the house’s destructio­n and back to the pioneer family who first rested there.

The question at the centre of “A Ghost Story” is: What endures? And if nothing does, what’s it all for? The centrepiec­e scene, one of the flashbacks, is a party at their house where one friend (the actor and musician Will Oldham) delivers a dark and searing monologue where he declares that everything you’ve ever stood for, everything you’ve made “will go.” Children will die. The pages of books will burn.

“A Ghost Story” makes a gentle peace with its own futility.

It, too, will one day perish, and it’s perhaps fitting to contemplat­e such inevitable ends at this particular moviegoing moment — when cinema often feels like a wayward ghost of itself.

It’s possible to admire “A Ghost Story” for its pursuit of something profound, while being totally unmoved by it. Just as with “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints,” there’s a layer of calculated artifice that is draped like a bedsheet over the whole enterprise. Little of it hits with any feeling, and the long pie-eating (or not) shots only allow time to ponder the filmmaker’s designs, which are always front and centre.

“A Ghost Story” is what it says it is, and it may well haunt you. It won’t scare you; it doesn’t even say “boo.” But glowing light and ghostly soulfulnes­s linger on like a quiet, scratching presence that won’t leave you.

“A Ghost Story,” an A24 release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for “brief language and a disturbing image.” Running time: 87 minutes.

Two-and-a-half stars out of four.

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? This image released by A24 shows a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.”
Associated Press photos This image released by A24 shows a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.”
 ??  ?? This image released by A24 shows Rooney Mara in a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.” Casey Affleck is shown in a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.”
This image released by A24 shows Rooney Mara in a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.” Casey Affleck is shown in a scene from the film “A Ghost Story.”
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