Sunday Star-Times

Three women of importance

- James Croot james.croot@stuff.co.nz

The first big gongs of the Hollywood awards season will be handed out at Monday’s Golden Globes (which Sky TV is broadcasti­ng live on its Vibe channel from 2pm). Among the heavy hitters from TV shows such as The Marvelous Mrs Maisel and The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace, and movies such as A Star is Born and The Favourite, are three terrific female performanc­es you may have missed.

With all due respect to a certain New Zealand politician, Sharp Objects (Neon) is incontrove­rtible proof that there’s only one Amy Adams. Based on the 2006 debut novel of Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn, the eight-part dark drama sees the Italian-born American actress play troubled Camille Preaker.

A St Louis reporter, she returns to her smalltown roots when editor Frank Curry (Miguel Sandoval) assigns her to cover the murder of two young women in her former stomping ground.

A collaborat­ion between writer Marti Noxon (UnREAL, Code Black) and Big Little Lies director Jean-Marc Vallee, Sharp Objects is a slowburnin­g psychologi­cal thriller. The world-weary residents of Wind Gap are superbly realised, with everyone a potential suspect.

Meanwhile, in Tully (available on DVD/Bluray and streaming sites), Charlize Theron delivers a stunning performanc­e in a role so far removed from her last one in Atomic Blonde, it’s mind-boggling.

Normally, we talk about male actors transformi­ng their bodies for roles, but here the South African actress gained 23kg to play struggling mother-of-three Marlo.

In this fourth collaborat­ion between Jason Reitman and Diablo Cody (Juno, Young Adult), Marlo’s life is transforme­d by the arrival of 26-year-old ‘‘nighty nanny’’ Tully (Mackenzie Davis). Although its depiction of post-natal depression has attracted some criticism, its subtle and understate­d handling is a revelation, and delivers a greater dramatic impact.

Finally, The Wife (DVD/Blu-ray and streaming sites) could well be the drama that wins Glenn Close a third Golden Globe. She plays Joan Castleman, whose husband is about to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature, but who is harbouring a long-held secret. It is a slow-burning drama that richly rewards the patient viewer.

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