The Scotsman

Film

The Big Sick finds humour and heart in the travails of dating in a way that feels fresh, while Doug Liman’s Iraq-set thriller The Wall is a nerve-jangling affair

- Alistairha­rkness @aliharknes­s

Alistair Harkness reviews The Big Sick

One of the most delightful things about The Big

Sick is how casually it reinvigora­tes the romantic comedy. Based on star Kumail Nanjiani’s own relationsh­ip with his screenwrit­er wife Emily V Gordon (they wrote the movie together), it’s a film that feels so true to the realities of modern relationsh­ips that even though it’s filled with the sort of bizarre true life scenarios that sound contrived in a movie, it’s easy to relate to the complicati­ons and dilemmas they generate.

Playing a lightly fictionali­sed version of himself, Nanjiani (who’s probably best known for his role in the TV show Silicon Valley) plays “Kumail”, a 30-ish Pakistania­merican stand-up comic who’s trying to negotiate the Chicago dating scene while simultaneo­usly trying to deflect the efforts of his Muslim family to coerce him into an arranged marriage. For the sake of an easy life, Kumail dutifully goes on dates with the women his mother sets him up with, but this gets complicate­d when he falls for a white woman called Emily (Zoe Kazan) after she affectiona­tely heckles him at a show. Too meek to stand-up to his family, he keeps their relationsh­ip a secret, not quite realising how unfair he’s being to Emily or his potential suitors.

As schematic as that sounds, it unfurls organicall­y on screen thanks to Nanjiani and Kazan, who are great here at tapping into the playfully deceptive dance that new couples undertake in their desperatio­n not to blow the relationsh­ip early on. Director Michael Showalter (who was one of the creators of this year’s hipster TV hit Search Party) also has a nice loose style, his camera frequently hanging back to give the characters room to develop.

Indeed, nothing feels forced here. Even when the film plays on our expectatio­ns of the romcom formula, it does so to upend them. Early on, for instance, Emily dumps Kumail when she realises his family know nothing about her, thus setting us up for the traditiona­l redemptive ending where the not-yet-mature protagonis­t realises he’s made a mess of things and has to embark on a journey of self-discovery to fix them. Yet in The Big Sick, Kumail’s determinat­ion to win Emily back is complicate­d by a swift and sudden illness that leaves her in an induced coma and the film in an interestin­g place. Not only does Kumail have to process his own suddenly complicate­d feelings about Emily, which are bound up in the now potentiall­y problemati­c fact that he’s trying to remain part of her life when she has no say in the matter, he also has to deal with her distraught parents (played by Holly Hunter and Ray Romano), whose faltering marriage seems like it’s being held together by their shared love for their daughter.

That’s a lot for a comedy to juggle, but The Big Sick invests so much in its characters that the messiness of its real life inspiratio­n finds a compelling parallel in the film’s refusal to transform Emily’s coma into some kind of cutesy While You

Were Sleeping-style plot device. Instead Showalter – taking cues from producer Judd Apatow’s own freeflowin­g comedies – takes The Big Sick to some dark and uncomforta­ble places, fully confident that humour can be found there too. This is a film that confronts casual racism, gender politics and cultural insensitiv­ity with the kind of sophistica­tion not really seen outside of short-form prestige TV shows such as Master of

None and Louie. But while it brings the romcom up to date by changing the surroundin­g landscape, it remains true to the spirit of genre in the most fundamenta­l way: you can’t help rooting for its protagonis­ts to get together.

Sandwiched between two Tom Cruise blockbuste­rs – The Edge of Tomorrow and the forthcomin­g

American Made – Doug Liman’s latest feels like something of a cinematic palate cleanser. Set in Iraq in late 2007, just as American involvemen­t is supposedly winding down, realtime thriller The Wall homes in on Aaron Taylor-johnson’s marine as he’s pinned down by an Iraqi sniper in the baking heat of a bombed-out settlement.

With his fellow marine (played by John Cena) bleeding out and his radio damaged, Isaac (Taylor-johnson) is soon embroiled in a battle of wits with a hyper-intelligen­t Iraqi sniper whose insights into the war rattle the secretbear­ing American. Essentiall­y a two-

Even when The Big Sick plays on our expectatio­ns of the romcom formula, it does so to upend them

hander between Taylor-johnson and the disembodie­d voice of his adversary (played by Laith Nakli), what follows is a solid example of the sort of single-location thriller – Locke,

Buried, Phone Booth – that often ends up being more intriguing as a concept than a movie. Here, though, Liman keeps everything tightly wound and over the course of its brief 90-minute running time Dwain Worrell’s script presents a compelling look at how conflict is repeatedly escalated by underestim­ating the enemy.

Parents confronted with a movie entitled Captain Underpants might not relish the prospect of sitting through it with their kids, but this CG animated adventure – about a couple of best friends who manage (via a spot of hypnosis) to transform their mean headmaster into their own titular comic book creation – is more inventive than most animated fare this summer. Though self-aware toilet humour is its default position, there are also some surprising­ly pointed gags about cuts to arts education worked into a plot that sees its ethnically diverse heroes taking on a super-villain intent on robbing the world of laughter. In some respects it’s a bit too pleased with itself, but it breezes by fast enough to make those summer holiday trips to the movies a little more bearable. ■

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from main: The Big Sick; The Wall; Captain Underpants
Clockwise from main: The Big Sick; The Wall; Captain Underpants
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