The Scotsman

Film

Jennifer Lawrence plays against type as a dutiful wife brought to the limits of sanity by unexpected visitors in Darren Aronofsky’s Mother!, while the stereotype-laden Victoria and Abdul does few favours for its star Judi Dench

- Alistair harkness @aliharknes­s

Alistair Harkness reviews Mother!

Hell is other people in Mother!, Darren Aronofsky’s nightmaris­h rollercoas­ter ride through a young woman’s rapidly unravellin­g psyche as a succession of strangers invade the elaborate home she’s in the process of renovating for her husband. Played by an against-type Jennifer Lawrence, the never-named woman is the devoted wife and muse of an egocentric poet (Javier Bardem) who’s old enough to be her father and casually cruel enough to join the long line of asshole artists who expect the world to fall at their feet. He hasn’t written anything for years – and his lack of output is matched by his unwillingn­ess to put out, something that has left Lawrence’s lonely and frustrated spouse walking on eggshells round the house as he spends an inordinate amount of time in his study fawning over an odd crystal-shaped heirloom.

The crystal is the only artefact to have survived a fire that all but destroyed the house before Lawrence’s character was on the scene. Her devotion to reconstruc­ting the strange octagonal country manse – from which she doesn’t seem able to leave – is broadly metaphoric­al of the supportive role she’s expected to play in her husband’s profession­al life. Having let her own insecuriti­es take over in lieu of a healthy relationsh­ip with her deceptivel­y charming husband, the house has become her sanctuary, despite its walls turning spongy, its floorboard­s becoming fleshy and a discarded heart playing havoc with the plumbing.

These are the first proper indication­s of the surreal, hallucinat­ory, horror movie dreamlogic Aronofsky is following in

Mother! and it’s worth embracing early on because things only get stranger and more out-there with each passing minute. This is especially so following the arrival of a bizarre old man (Ed Harris) at their door one night. What transpires is weird and off-putting and leaves Lawrence’s character confused and even more unsettled, something compounded by the way her husband welcomes him into their home, along with his wife, who arrives the next morning and whose pointedly personal remarks towards Lawrence immediatel­y test the limits of her compliance with the forced politeness of marriage and the demands of unexpected hospitalit­y (the wife is played by a fabulously unpleasant Michelle Pfeiffer).

And then things get really weird. As her husband continues to invite chaos into their home for his own artistic gratificat­ion, Lawrence is pinballed through scene after scene in which more and more people arrive to trample all over her life, invade her space and casually insult her with their entitled attitudes and behaviour. Her frustratio­n and rage grow increasing­ly impotent, and after she falls pregnant, the exclamator­y melodrama indicated by the title intensifie­s further.

Though Lawrence is playing a more passive character than normal here, it’s not a passive role: she’s stuck in a dream world over which she has no control and Aronofsky makes sure we’re with her – on her side and in her mind – by shooting everything from her point of view. In some ways it plays like a continuati­on of both The Wrestler and Black Swan’s exploratio­ns of the destructiv­e nature of performanc­e and creation, though in this instance Aronofsky’s sympathy is not with the artist but with people they feed off, rely upon and sometimes discard when their work is done.

But like so many of the good horror films this year, Mother! also feels tethered to the crazy uncertaint­y of the real world. As structured, it’s impossible to predict what will happen next and, while there’s a kind of escalating madness familiar from Aronofsky’s past films from Pi and

Requiem for A Dream right through to his big-budget Old Testament wig-out Noah (there’s a bit of an Old Testament, apocalypti­c vibe about

Mother! too), its home-invasion premise feels broadly reflective of the way social media has opened up a channel directly into our homes for strangers to be casually hostile. The film’s increasing­ly wild plot deviation also parallels the way ongoing political uncertaint­ies have made days feel like weeks and weeks like years. This is the sort of film that likes to pull the rug from under you and reveal a gaping void of unimaginab­le horror. It’s certainly not comfort viewing. Home might be where the heart is, but whether said heart is still beating within a human body is another matter entirely.

Victoria and Abdul is very much comfort viewing – if your idea of comfort is a jocular trawl through the extended cinematic universe of Queen Victoria. Twenty years on from Mrs Brown, Judi Dench reprises

Like so many of the good horror films this year, Mother! also feels tethered to the crazy uncertaint­y of the real world

her role as the titular monarch in this anachronis­m-strewn exploratio­n of her relationsh­ip with Abdul Karim (Ali Fazal), a handsome young Indian servant with whom she apparently became quite taken in her final years. Though there’s an interestin­g story here about Britain’s waning Empire and the terrible inequities of the Raj, director Stephen Frears and Billy

Elliot screenwrit­er Lee Hall jettison it in favour of a cosy heritage buddy comedy full of groaning stereotype­s, panto villainy and a reimaginin­g of Queen Victoria as some sort of proto liberal progressiv­e. Dench is fine, but the film is a chore and a bore.

The new South Korean action extravagan­za The Villainess, meanwhile, is a triumph of style over coherence. Revolving around a female assassin turned government agent who goes on a rampage of revenge when a figure from her past shows up, it’s full of breathless action, but the convoluted plot conceived to tie it all together succeeds only in repeatedly tripping it up. ■

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem in Mother!; The Villainess; Judi Dench and Ali Fazal in Victoria and Abdul
Clockwise from main: Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem in Mother!; The Villainess; Judi Dench and Ali Fazal in Victoria and Abdul
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