Vancouver Sun

OBJECTS OF ATTACHMENT

Film struggles to probe feelings that link us to the physical world

- TINA HASSANNIA

“Lives lived” is the kind of simple, weighty sentiment intended to buoy a drama like Mark Pellington and Alex Ross Perry’s Nostalgia, a film about the emotional gravitas of mementoes belonging to an intersecti­ng series of characters who are processing grief. But this well-intentione­d platitude — uttered at least twice by a self-reflective insurance assessor Daniel (John Ortiz) in the opening act of the film — sinks the film’s thematic momentum instead of anchoring it.

The first half of Nostalgia suffers from self-serious and too-literal dialogue wherein strangers open up to each other about navigating their respective emotional labour. Heavily reliant on self-reflective monologues, the screenplay expects us to immediatel­y relate to these contemplat­ive characters who all sound exactly the same.

Nostalgia begins with one family, then journeys into others’ hidden pockets of familial pain. Upon the request of the fretful, pregnant Bethany (Amber Tamblyn), Daniel visits her grandfathe­r,

the retired widower Ronald (Bruce Dern), awaiting death and uninterest­ed in the assorted crap he will inevitably leave behind for Bethany. Daniel then visits Helen (Ellen Burstyn), a weeping widow who describes the devastatin­g experience of having less than a minute to decide what precious object to grab before being trapped in her burning house.

She manages to save a valuable signed baseball passed down multiple generation­s in her deceased husband’s family. In the aftermath of losing nearly every physical object that defined her existence, Helen considers selling the singular keepsake of her husband to ensure financial independen­ce.

She finds an intuitive buyer in Will (Jon Hamm), a baseballme­morabilia merchant adept at tactfully handling tearful customers and their emotionall­y laden possession­s. With their conversati­on, Nostalgia finally finds its footing — maybe thanks to the fact that Helen has a concrete decision to make, and requires advice to make it, or that the two characters have a more even-handed dialogue than the rambling pattern of monologues from the first act.

For Will, financial investment in objects trumps the emotional kind — an opinion shaped by his wife leaving him a decade prior. Burstyn and Hamm’s soulful chemistry is ultimately outmatched by Hamm’s natural dynamic with Catherine Keener, who plays his sister Donna. They clash over the management of their parents’ belongings, abandoned in their childhood home.

Will sees it all as junk, minus a few valuable records — a concept his millennial niece cannot comprehend, as everything physically tangible exists in the cloud for her. Why have things at all when they exist in the unmessy digital realm? A fair point, but one so pointed it spears the viewer with its heavy-handed thematic import. Will scoffs at his sentimenta­l sister’s hoarding tendencies and her rented storage unit, but a few events have Will and Donna reeling and reframing their beliefs about precious objects.

Nostalgia has introspect­ive dialogue that encourages its impressive actors to inflect genuine emotion, and its variety of painful and common experience­s lets viewers connect deeply with the material. Its thematic throughlin­e, however, feels more than a little forced at times.

 ?? ELEVATION PICTURES ?? John Ortiz stars in Nostalgia, which delves into the meaning of mementoes with too-serious dialogue and a simple platitude.
ELEVATION PICTURES John Ortiz stars in Nostalgia, which delves into the meaning of mementoes with too-serious dialogue and a simple platitude.
 ?? ELEVATION PICTURES ?? Amber Tamblyn’s fretful, pregnant character Bethany sparks the journey that frames the overly self-reflective Nostalgia.
ELEVATION PICTURES Amber Tamblyn’s fretful, pregnant character Bethany sparks the journey that frames the overly self-reflective Nostalgia.

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