Ottawa Citizen

IT’S WRITTEN ON THE BODY

Certain Women a brilliant exploratio­n of how we miscommuni­cate with one another

- TINA HASSANNIA

Certain Women is one of those meticulous­ly directed films with a deceptive subtleness and a powerful emotional punch that demands close attention. Consider its muted, rustic colour palette and artisanal, indie-film esthetic the perfect antidote to Hollywood’s shiny, bloated tentpole season.

Three intersecti­ng storylines provide glimpses into the ordinary lives of three women, all set in small-town Montana. There’s Laura (Laura Dern), a lawyer whose obliging nature has extended her counsel beyond the profession­al domain into emotional territory for her unwanted client Fuller (Jared Harris).

Laura points out in a polite and seemingly rehearsed manner

that his erroneous acceptance of a small settlement, which fails to cover the extent of his post-injury disability prevents him from pursuing future settlement­s. It takes repeated statements from a male lawyer before Fuller finally believes this informatio­n. Eventually, Laura’s all-too-accommodat­ing nature and profession­al status as Fuller’s attorney leads them into a dangerous standoff.

The second storyline also finds a mother/wife, Gina (Michelle Williams) — whose husband Ryan (James Le Gros) is building her a house — coveting an ornamental landscapin­g sandstone belonging to an older man (René Auberjonoi­s) with dementia. He is rendered incapable of responding to any of Gina’s questions or conversati­on prompts, and yet he has no problem communicat­ing with Ryan.

The third storyline also features miscommuni­cation, this time between two women. Lily Gladstone plays a lonely farm rancher looking for the loweststak­es kicks she can find in her small town. She comes across fresh-from-law-school Elizabeth (Kristen Stewart). The two strike up an unusual, one-sided friendship that finds the rancher mostly observing and taking in the awesome presence that is Stewart.

Director Kelly Reichardt is a master at establishi­ng complex character intentions through the smallest of actions. The unnamed rancher, for example, exhibits signs that she’s romantical­ly interested in the lawyer through mesmerized yet polite looks at Stewart’s character that are repeated time and time again. But it ultimately matters less if she’s interested platonical­ly or romantical­ly than does the inescapabl­e vastness of her loneliness.

Reichardt is an expert “speaker” of body language. She knows exactly how to write dialogue that will allow her actors to make the most of subtle nonverbal cues and memorably tell her stories. Certain Women showcases an understand­ing of illusive human communicat­ion, making it the most effective contempora­ry film about micro-aggression­s — those small, seemingly innocuous types of communicat­ion that undermine or strip away people’s sense of agency, control and dignity.

But while Certain Women is focused somewhat on the nuance of dialogue and its intertwini­ng with body language, it’s a deliberate­ly quiet and reserved little film. The film artfully texturizes the surroundin­gs to create a contemplat­ive mood and pace. This is Reichardt’s most formally evocative work, and one that finds new pleasures in repeated viewings. In short, it’s her new masterpiec­e.

 ?? IFC FILMS ?? Michelle Williams stars as a young woman who struggles to communicat­e with an older man with dementia in Certain Women.
IFC FILMS Michelle Williams stars as a young woman who struggles to communicat­e with an older man with dementia in Certain Women.

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