The Scotsman

Damaged relationsh­ips at the heart of Film Festival

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Highlights of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival this year from main, Love & Mercy, The Stanford Prison Experiment and A S THIS year’s Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival moves into its first weekend, damaging family relationsh­ips and twisted power dynamics seem to be the running themes. They’re certainly at the heart of Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy (HHHH), which casts Paul Dano and John Cusack as the creative driving force behind The Beach Boys at two crucial stages in his life: the extraordin­ary period of mid-1960s creativity that birthed Pet Sounds, Good Vibrations and the compromise­d Smile project, and Wilson’s difficult attempts to get to grips with his mental illness in the 1980s.

As the film has it, both periods are complicate­d by domineerin­g, manipulati­ve figures: Wilson’s father in his younger days and, later on, his therapist Eugene Landy (Paul Giamatti), who became his legal guardian after getting him back on his feet following a bed-ridden breakdown. Both were abusive in different ways and the film’s decision to jump back-and-forth in time subtly illustrate­s how the psychic damage wrought by these controllin­g relationsh­ips unsettled Wilson’s already fragile mental state. Dano and Cusack are great at conveying this, but the film’s good too at capturing the manic, frequently thrilling way in which Wilson translated inspiratio­n into instrument­ation.

Control and psychology of power is the subject of The Stanford Prison Experiment (HHHH), EIFF regular Kyle Patrick Alvarez’s quietly horrifying dramatisat­ion of the infamous 1971 university study in which a group of volunteer students were placed in a simulated prison environmen­t – half of them cast as guards, the other half as inmates. The experiment was supposed to last two weeks but started going horribly wrong after the first day thanks to the speed with which some of the subjects embraced their authoritat­ive roles. Cranking up the tension by gradually moving his camera include Clockwise

Closer We Get in closer and closer to his actors, Alvarez smartly shrinks the distance between them and us in order to intensify the what-wouldyou-do? discomfort the experiment was designed to explore.

There’s plenty of discomfort too in The Closer We Get (HHH), Scottish documentar­y maker Karen Guthrie’s sometimes painfully intimate look at her own complicate­d relationsh­ip with her elderly parents. What initially appears to be something of a misery memoir detailing Guthrie’s transforma­tion into a primary care-giver for her mother following a debilitati­ng stroke is soon revealed to be something far richer and more intriguing as she delves into the secret life her father led while working in Africa for a decade when she was a kid. As such, the film functions as something of a bitterswee­t love letter to her mother and an explicit attempt to hold her stoic father to account for the effect his behaviour over the years has had on their family. If there’s a fault, it’s that Guthrie’s own narration can tend towards the purple, but the film’s good at illustrati­ng the ways in which families almost can’t help but bruise one another.

Hurting the ones you love is a theme of another Scottish offering. Sadly, Glasgowset sex drama Swung (H), based on Ewan Morrison’s novel about the emotional impact of swinging on a journalist and her impotent partner’s relationsh­ip, is a dull and dour affair. The conceit of a journalist­ic investigat­ion into sex is pure 50 Shades of Grey – and about credible. Ditto the risible dialogue, performanc­es and terrible visual metaphors, which at one point includes a train whooshing past at the moment of climax. l Love & Mercy, tonight and Thursday; The Stanford Prison Experiment, tomorrow, Cineworld; The Closer We Get, tonight, Filmhouse; Swung, tomorrow, Cineworld, www.edfilmfest.org.uk ALISTAIR HARKNESS

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