Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Cat’s whiskers

THE ELECTRICAL LIFE OF LOUIS WAIN

- with ANDY LEA

Cert 12A ★★★ In cinemas on New Year’s Day, previews on Wednesday

If you haven’t picked a winner for the Best Actor Oscar yet, well done, you. The ceremony isn’t until the end of March, you’ve got a life, and there are far more interestin­g things to think about.

Still, my money is on Benedict Cumberbatc­h – not for his showy turn in this prestige drama but for his quietly sinister repressed cowboy in Netflix’s The Power Of The Dog.

Cumberbatc­h probably expected this self-produced biopic to be the more likely awards movie. After all, it features three of the Academy’s favourite things – a true story, a period setting and a tragic affliction. But what is going on in the unusual head of famous cat artist Louis Wain (me neither) is never explained.

Modern diagnoses range from schizophre­nia to a form of autism but they didn’t bother with such niceties in the 1920s and just shunted him off to an asylum.

Before we see Cumberbatc­h drooling through his old man make up, we have a good hour-and-a-half of the twitchy acting that earned him a nomination for Alan Turing biopic The Imitation Game.

The story begins with a young Wain, sole provider for five sisters, manically knocking out sketches for the Illustrate­d London News.

He’s a man of many interests ranging from boxing and opera writing to spouting potty theories about electricit­y. Thankfully, he calms down a fair bit when he starts a touching and endearingl­y clumsy relationsh­ip with Claire Foy’s governess.

The chemistry between the two stars powers the entertaini­ng first hour. The more taxing second half focuses on Louis’ deteriorat­ing mental health and his hit twee cat pictures that apparently turned the once-ignored “mouser” into man’s most popular and most ridiculous pet. The internet owes him a great debt.

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His twee cat pictures turn the ignored mouser into man’s most popular pet

 ?? ?? BOND Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Claire Foy
BOND Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Claire Foy
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