The Daily Telegraph

Turning an addiction clinic into a thespian boot camp

A Million Little Pieces 15 cert, 113 min

- Tim Robey FILM CRITIC

Dir Sam Taylor-johnson Starring Aaron Taylor-johnson, Billy Bob Thornton, Juliette Lewis, Charlie Hunnam, Giovanni Ribisi, Odessa Young, Ryan Hurst

James Frey’s book A Million Little Pieces, which started life on the shelves as a self-help misery memoir and became a publishing phenomenon, wound up as an object lesson in the dangers of embellishm­ent. Debunked on The Oprah Winfrey Show and elsewhere, this untrustwor­thy account of Frey’s time in a rehab clinic forced its author to make apology after apology, almost to the point where a 12-step programme for literary fraud succeeded his original stint for drug and alcohol abuse.

A planned adaptation by Mark Romanek (Never Let Me Go) was dropped, and a decade elapsed. Few directors would have seen the value of messing around with it ever again, but Sam Taylor-johnson has plucked

this book from the wreckage of its own reputation and given it a shot. Her film chiefly exists as a vehicle for her other half, Aaron, to dig down into the role of a self-destructiv­e addict and show us what he’s capable of.

Several things rescue this from a slippery road to perdition as a potential vanity project. It was shot in a mere 20 days, on a $4 million budget – you can compare the $25 million spent on Beautiful Boy, another addiction saga, and decide which is the more wasteful.

And the very nature of Frey’s fabricatio­ns is freeing to a filmmaker:

Billy Bob Thornton wheels in a cartload of wily wisdom as a mafia boss in hiding after a revenge mission

there’s no need to stick to facts when they aren’t facts.

The theme is the thing, and the Taylor-johnsons – who co-wrote this script – want to show us the gruelling process of crawling out of hell, which is where we fittingly start.

The opening scene has James spinning out in a drug den, dancing solo, naked and out of his mind. The first frame recreates William Eggleston’s photograph of a bare light bulb – one artist’s hat-tip to another – and the punchline is James’s tumble off a balcony, choreograp­hed with a precision so perfect it’s funny.

He regains consciousn­ess, with broken teeth and shaking all over, on a flight to Minnesota, where his brother (a solid Charlie Hunnam) checks the clammy scarecrow into rehab – and here we essentiall­y remain until he’s guided toward the light.

The film’s sincere core is threatened a little by its flashier directoria­l effects. Within moments of arriving, James imagines himself sliding – it becomes an elaborate dance routine – through a corridor of ordure. The fact that this was achieved practicall­y in a single take doesn’t make it any less disruptive or jarring, at a moment in the film when we need to be tethered to rock bottom, rather than witnessing such fancy footwork on either side of the camera.

It’s a riskily unsympathe­tic performanc­e from Taylor-johnson: he’s such an angry mess as to be more repellent than pitiable a lot of the time.

And the film’s strength is to glue us to him anyway, testing our empathy almost to breaking point.

This is far from the syrupy, audience-coddling portrait that a higher-budget picture would almost certainly have inflicted on the material.

The guerrilla energy of the production is, at least, the right idea: there are opportunit­ies for lightning in a bottle here, even if not all of them are grasped.

Twitching up a storm, Giovanni Ribisi overdoes things as a gay addict and so-called “sexual ninja” whose desperate advances James has to sidestep; Juliette Lewis’s role as a staff psychologi­st is disappoint­ingly forgettabl­e compared with Dash Mihok’s as the pensive supervisor.

Meanwhile, Billy Bob Thornton wheels in a cartload of wily wisdom as a mentor figure called Leonard – an erstwhile Mafia boss, in hiding after a bloody revenge mission, who’s given to wearing some highly eccentric outfits (a ridiculous onesie, and double white denim) which offset that Thorntonia­n deadpan rather well.

If the clinic comes to resemble as much a thespian boot-camp as a setting for recovery – and if the last image of said recovery, shot through a pint of whisky, has more rhetorical than emotional force – the better moments fight their way through, with both Taylor-johnsons knuckling down to their thoroughly sober task.

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 ??  ?? Addicted: Aaron Taylor-johnson (top right) with Giovanni Ribisi, and Billy Bob Thornton, left
Addicted: Aaron Taylor-johnson (top right) with Giovanni Ribisi, and Billy Bob Thornton, left
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