National Post (National Edition)

A ‘selfless and ultimately futile quest’

- Chris Knight Beautiful Boy opens Oct. 19 in Vancouver and Toronto, and Oct. 26 across Canada.

Beautiful Boy

FILM REVIEW

Beautiful Boy

Many North American moviegoers were introduced to Belgian writer/director Felix van Groeningen through his 2012 musicalrom­ance The Broken Circle Breakdown, a melancholy love story told out of order, like a diary whose pages had been scattered on the wind. Emotionall­y rich and moody, it was almost guaranteed to makeyoucry.

Compare that to Beautiful Boy, which would seem to have similar lachrymal aspiration­s. After all, it tells the story of a father and his drug-addicted son, played by empathy-incarnate Steve Carell and rising-star Timothée Chalamet, whose features are so luminous you can imagine Michelange­lo turning him away as a potential model. “Too perfect,” the Renaissanc­e artist would have huffed. “No one will believe it.”

And yet, when the film had its world première at the recent Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, the audience response was muted. I didn’t check every patron, but I’d be willing to bet there wasn’t a damp eye in the house. What went wrong?

The screenplay was adapted by Van Groeningen and Luke Davies (Lion) from a pair of memoirs: Tweak, by Nic Sheff, who in the movie is played by Chalamet; and Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Addiction, by David Sheff (Carell). Those sources might explain why the women in the story are so underplaye­d, even when embodied by the excellent Amy Ryan (as Nic’s mom and David’s ex-wife) and Maura Tierney (new wife, stepmom). David is so caught up in trying to save his son, I wasn’t even sure what his relationsh­ips to these women were.

That selfless and ultimately futile quest is what gives Beautiful Boy its narrative momentum and its pathos. We’ve long been told that addicts are ultimately responsibl­e for saving themselves, but who could watch a loved one self-destruct without wanting to wade in and help? This is especially so when it’s your child; as a parent you’ve been responsibl­e for all their mishaps since birth. When do you choose to relinquish that obligation?

Carell certainly goes the distance; in one almost-funny scene, he decides to score some meth and try it himself, apparently to little effect. And it’s true that trying to help someone with a substance addiction can feel like an addiction itself: repetition without end; highs of sobriety followed inevitably by relapse – which, confusingl­y, can be defined as a part of recovery.

But for all the emotional heft in the performanc­es — and Beautiful Boy will certainly speak to those who share its central issue — the film’s own sentiments seem oddly flattened by the end of two hours. Part of this is due to its fractured timeline; what worked so well in Broken Circle leaves us lost in a chronology that is confusingl­y circular to begin with.

It may also have been a mistake to cut away from some of the gritty lows of the addiction cycle; not that I want to watch Chalamet suffer onscreen, but it’s part of the picture.

Beautiful Boy’s world première at TIFF was coincident­ally alongside Ben Is Back, which stars Lucas Hedges and Julia Roberts in another tale of addicted child and distraught parent. And while it may seem cruel to rate one sad story over another, that’s part of the critic’s job. Ben Is Back opens Dec. 14, and if you only see one child-addict story this season, well ... ∫∫1/2

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 ?? VVS FILMS ?? Maura Tierney as Karen Barbour and Steve Carell as David Scheff star in Beautiful Boy.
VVS FILMS Maura Tierney as Karen Barbour and Steve Carell as David Scheff star in Beautiful Boy.

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