Empire (UK)

NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS

-

15 88 MINS

★★★★

NOW DIGITAL 15 101 MINS

Eliza Hittman

Sidney Flanigan, Talia Ryder, Théodore Pellerin, Sharon Van Etten

When 17-year-old Pennsylvan­ian girl Autumn (Flanigan) discovers she’s pregnant, she heads to New York with her cousin Skylar (Ryder) for an abortion. But getting the procedure — and keeping it secret from her parents — won’t be so easy.

“DON’T YOU EVER wish you were a dude?” teenager Skylar (Talia Ryder) asks her cousin Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) in the latest film from Beach Rats director Eliza Hittman. It’s a resonant question that speaks to the vastly differing experience­s of young men and women as explored in Never Rarely Sometimes Always

— a film in which women, teenage girls especially, get the raw end of the deal at every level. To be a “dude” would be so much easier.

Things are especially hard for Autumn — 17, living in Pennsylvan­ia, and pregnant. Far from ready for any kind of parental responsibi­lity, she knows abortion is her best option. But it isn’t as simple as that — Hittman’s slow-building film offers a straight-up account of the numerous barriers Autumn needs to get past. Her local fertility clinic is pro-life. Pennsylvan­ia law means she needs parental consent for an abortion. And finding the resources to venture to New York, where the same rules don’t apply, brings a host of other complicati­ons.

But for all the problems standing in

Autumn’s way, there are the women who offer solidarity — from Skylar, who travels with Autumn to New York while literally carrying her baggage, to the genuinely caring staff at the abortion clinic there. These helping hands are welcome relief in a drama that is largely tough by necessity. There are upsetting scenes of self-harm, while an alliance with carefree Jasper (Théodore Pellerin), New York-bound for very different reasons, becomes increasing­ly uneasy. The final half-hour ratchets up the tension as the girls’ cash — and subsequent­ly their options — dwindle. It is, in many ways, a social horror story.

It’s Hittman’s choices as both writer and director that make it so effective — conjuring the overwhelmi­ng intensity and pervasive threat of the big city, and having her characters speak in naturalist­ic, monosyllab­ic conversati­ons rather than verbose movie teen-speak. Best of all is the film’s centre-piece sequence: a five-minute unbroken take as Autumn is asked a series of mandatory questions about her sexual history at the abortion clinic, where the answer options (the “never”, “rarely”, “sometimes”, “always” of the title) reveal yet more difficulti­es in her past. Flanigan’s performanc­e completely commands the screen, the camera never cutting away.

Through it all, Hittman creates an empathetic, humanistic portrait of Autumn’s hardships. Never Rarely Sometimes Always is transparen­t in its depiction of the system that hinders just as much as it helps, the privilege of men who are just as culpable but conspicuou­sly absent, and the relationsh­ips between women that prove necessary for survival. Every so often, Hittman’s lens settles on Autumn and Skylar holding hands, their pinkie fingers intertwine­d. It’s a bond that, even under immense strain, won’t be broken. BEN TRAVIS

Rarely Sometimes Always

Never

★★★

OUT

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) faces difficult choices.
Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) faces difficult choices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom