The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Giamatti and Hahn will make you laugh — and cry — in ‘Private Life’

- By Michael O’Sullivan

IT’S DEEPLY gratifying to see Tamara Jenkins return to the director’s chair with the infertilit­y dramedy “Private Life,” 10 long years after her bitterswee­t, funny and wise screenplay for “The Savages” earned the filmmaker an Oscar nomination.

Like that 2007 film — which also garnered Laura Linney an acting nod for her performanc­e as one of two siblings coping with a dying parent — “Private Life” mines Jenkins’ life experience: specifical­ly, her efforts to have a baby with her husband, Jim Taylor (the screenwrit­ing partner of Alexander Payne). Her only previous feature, 1998’s “Slums of Beverly Hills,” was also semiautobi­ographical, loosely inspired by the director’s teenage years living in the low-rent fringes of Beverly Hills.

Starring Kathryn Hahn as Rachel, a successful 40-ish writer, and Paul Giamatti as her slightly older husband, Richard, a former theatre director who now manages an artisanal pickle company in a rapidly gentrifyin­g New York City, the new film centres on Rachel and Richard’s struggle to have a child. (That struggle bounces, with gentle yet sharply observant humour, from in vitro fertilisat­ion to adoption inquiries to the use of a donor egg.)

The comedy, while unflinchin­gly honest and prone to bandying about such terms as “intracytop­lasmic sperm injection” and “follitropi­n,” is never really about technology, though. Rather, and to its great credit, it’s always about the people involved.

In addition to the at times achingly vulnerable performanc­es by Hahn and Giamatti, “Private Life” also includes indelible turns by such supporting actors as Siobhan Fallon Hogan as Richard and Rachel’s couples counsellor; Denis O’Hare as Rachel’s fertility doctor, who plays prog rock while giving gynaecolog­ical exams; and John Carroll Lynch and Molly Shannon as Richard’s bickering brother and sister-in-law. Newcomer Kayli Carter makes perhaps the deepest impression as Richard and Rachel’s niece, Sadie, who moves in with the film’s protagonis­ts after dropping out of Bard College and who comes to play an unexpected­ly central role in their efforts to conceive.

The title “Private Life” refers, ironically, to the loss of privacy when two people’s most intimate relationsh­ip is, by necessity, opened up to the involvemen­t of others — for reasons that are not just medical but financial, psychologi­cal and, in the most contempora­ry sense of the word, social.

At the same time, Jenkins never forgets that the focus of this story needs to be on private, one-onone relationsh­ips. Even as her screenplay cheekily name-checks such pop-culture touchstone­s as “The Handmaid’s Tale” and “Rosemary’s Baby” — shorthand for what are too often women’s roles as commoditie­s in the patriarchy — “Private Life” is never glibly political. When Richard cracks that he feels like he’s in a Wendy Wasserstei­n play, it’s funny because he isn’t, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n.

“Private Life” earns its laughs, to be sure. But more important, it earns the tears of recognitio­n that fall, gently and warmly, between the yuks.

Four stars. Rated R. Also available via Netflix streaming. Contains strong sexual material, some graphic nudity and strong language. 127 minutes. — WPBloomber­g

The title “Private Life” refers, ironically, to the loss of privacy when two people’s most intimate relationsh­ip is, by necessity, opened up to the involvemen­t of others.

 ??  ?? (Left to right) Carter, Giamatti and Hahn in ‘Private Life’. — Courtesy of Netflix
(Left to right) Carter, Giamatti and Hahn in ‘Private Life’. — Courtesy of Netflix

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