National Post (National Edition)

The virtues of an old-fashioned picture

The Other Half

- CALUM MARSH National Post

Joey Klein’s The Other Half is an old-fashioned picture. Not only does it bear few hallmarks of life for urban twentysome­things in the present day — the hero, an English ex-pat living in Toronto named Nickie (Tom Cullen), communicat­es with his mother back home almost exclusivel­y by way of calling cards and payphones — but it’s also the sort of passé romantic drama I’d long assumed to be obsolete for independen­t filmmakers. But here’s Klein, stalwart Canadian star of screens big and small, with his directoria­l debut bringing the style back to vogue.

Nickie is of a type recently fashionabl­e among leading men: grief-stricken, volatile, and darkly handsome, couldbe British cousin to Christophe­r Abbott in James White or Casey Affleck in this year’s Manchester by the Sea. Like those louts, Nickie is by turns morose and choleric, passing the time either sulking to himself at the bar or blowing up at strangers; all it takes is a bumped shoulder in passing, a dubious glance in a club, to provoke a cataract of sailing fists. But where Abbott and Affleck’s wretches seemed beyond redemption — their pain too acute, their agony ongoing — Nickie wants to be saved. He’s ready to love, ready to get over it, ready to go to the bar without brawling.

Enter Emily (Tatiana Maslany), a sort of manicdepre­ssive pixie dream girl. She and Nickie meet-cute (she’s on hand when he gets into a fight at the cafe that’s his meagre day job), fall for one another hard (dreamy romance montages abound) and seem on course for forever-happiness — until of course they aren’t. It soon transpires that Emily suffers from rapid cycling bipolar disorder: without the calming salve of her medication she’s prone to bouts of manic anarchy, a feverish analog to Nickie’s fits of rage. She blasts music, dances wildly, paints all day and night. It’s all Nickie can do to stand back and watch.

It’s a love nearly conquered by hardship: they try, they struggle, they flail, all a brand of romantic turbulence we’ve seen on screen before. What distinguis­hes The Other Half are two rare virtues; one novel, one indispensa­ble given the form. The first is the film’s fresh take on mental illness; fresh because it’s treated with sensitivit­y and care. Emily’s illness isn’t reduced to a quirk or idiosyncra­sy; neither does it unduly define her, governing every dimension of the role. Klein adopts the radical position that bipolar disorder is a problem this woman sometimes has under control and sometimes does not. Unfortunat­e that a true-to-life, down-to-earth depiction of mental illness needs to be singled out and commended in 2016. But it does, and this one ought to be.

Klein’s other asset is his ensemble. Maslany and Cullen have been praised extensivel­y (and justly) for their work here in festival reviews and across the trades; no less excellent, if perhaps less conspicuou­s, are the performanc­es of the film’s supporting players. Deragh Campbell, so terrific in Matt Porterfiel­d’s I Used to Be Darker, does much with little screen time. The oft-underappre­ciated Henry Czerny — he was Tom Cruise’s boss in Brian De Palma’s Mission Impossible, most memorably — lends depth and gravity to the role of Emily’s put-upon father, while Suzanne Clement, favoured leading lady of Xavier Dolan, gives some shading to the unloved stepmother. It stands to reason that a career actor would have a gift for directing actors himself. What Klein does with the talent on hand proves the point. ★★½

 ?? MONGREL MEDIA ?? The Other Half offers a rarely sensitive examinatio­n of mental illness and the cost it exacts.
MONGREL MEDIA The Other Half offers a rarely sensitive examinatio­n of mental illness and the cost it exacts.

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