The Scotsman

Road to hell

Jim Cummings is unsparing in his portrayal of a decent man’s struggles as grief knocks his life off course in Thunder Road, while Octavia Spencer shines as a matriarch gone wrong in enjoyabley trashy shocker, Ma

- Alistair Harkness @ aliharknes­s

Brian Cox makes the otherwise hokey Rory’s Way a more entertaini­ng prospect than its groaning fish- out- ofwater premise initially promises

Thunder Road opens with a man falling apart. At his mother’s funeral, despairing police officer Jim Arnaud ( played by the film’s writer/ director Jim Cummings) fails to keep it together as he attempts to deliver a eulogy involving the titular Bruce Springstee­n song, a malfunctio­ning boom- box and an excruciati­ng dance routine. The camera doesn’t really cut away until this squirming ordeal is over, and it’s hard not to be transfixed by the emotional car crash playing out in slow motion as Jim, blindsided by feelings he’s clearly never confronted, suddenly finds himself veering down different avenues of his complex family history as he tries to get back on track. It’s an unusual way to start a movie, but the risk pays off by foreshadow­ing the way this funny,

heartfelt, unsentimen­tal exploratio­n of grief and parenthood ends up reflecting the absurd ways in which real life frequently collapses the distance between the tragic and the comic. Returning to work straight after the funeral, for instance, Jim is served with divorce papers from his estranged wife who wants sole custody of his beloved daughter ( Kendal Farr) – a calamity that pushes him closer to breaking point as he attempts to settle his mother’s estate while dealing with the stresses of a job that would test the mettle of even the most zen- like person. Reminiscen­t of John C Reilly’s sadsack cop in Magnolia, Cummings’ protagonis­t is an empathetic marvel, a decent guy trying to hold it together as the world kicks him repeatedly in the groin.

A belated sequel to Gareth Edwards’ sombre 2014 reboot of the famed Japanese monster movie franchise,

Godzilla: King of the Monsters suffers from Marvel- inspired attempts create a monster- themed cinematic universe incorporat­ing 2017’ s woefully inept Kong: Skull

Island and from the more pressing, though not unrelated, issue of being unforgivab­ly dull. You’ll be thrilled to learn this is a film that requires us to remember plot details of a monster movie that didn’t exactly capture the public imaginatio­n and is now desperatel­y trying to build on the wacky mythology introduced in the aforementi­oned King Kong

reboot. But the film’s dullness is also down to how uninspired the action is, with co- writer/ director Michael Dougherty struggling to convey the requisite sense of scale as Godzilla and Mothra go on the rampage against a host of winged and mammoth- like creatures while the human cast – Kyle Chandler, Vera Farmiga, Stranger Things star Millie Bobby Brown and Sally Hawkins among them – try not to get squished.

Having directed Octavia Spencer to an Oscar in the horribly dated racial drama The Help, director Tate Taylor re- teams with her for Ma, an enjoyably trashy exploitati­on shocker about a lonely middle- aged woman ( Spencer) who befriends local teens and lets them party in her basement away from the prying eyes of parents and cops. Why is best not divulged in a review, but the film – the latest from Blumhouse Production­s ( Get Out, The

Purge) – does an effective job layering in enough mystery to facilitate some unexpected jump scares and some blunt social commentary for the # Metoo age. The overblown ending lets it down, but Spencer is great as the titular matriarch gone wrong and fellow Oscar- winner Allison Janney ( another alumnus from The Help) has a delicious cameo as her officious boss.

There’s more Oscar talent in

Sunset, Hungarian director László Nemes’ first film since his debut, the holocaust drama Son of Saul, won the Academy Award for best foreign language feature in 2016. Though stylistica­lly similar, it’s a very different beast, exploring as it does the last days of the AustroHung­arian empire as experience­d by a young woman hunting for clues to her family history. This is Irisz ( Juli Jakab), who has returned to Budapest in 1913 to work in the hat emporium founded by the parents she lost in a fire when she was two. Learning that she has an older brother who’s gone into hiding after murdering an aristocrat five years earlier, she

sets out to find him amid the chaos of Budapest as the anarchists with whom her sibling is affiliated start laying siege to the old order that Irisz’s employers and their clientele represent. Never leaving Irisz side, Nemes’ camera moves with her through the city, plunging us into the turbulence of the times, often in long single takes with no historical context and scant expository dialogue. That makes for a disorienta­ting experience, but the cumulative effect is mesmerisin­g, as vivid as a nightmaris­h dream that’s too slippery to fully comprehend but too haunting to forget.

As a curmudgeon­ly, Gaelicspea­king Hebridean native who travels to San Francisco to visit his estranged son ( JJ Feild) and new grandson, Brian Cox makes the otherwise hokey Rory’s Way a more entertaini­ng prospect than its groaning fish- out- of- water premise initially promises. Early scenes of the title character’s island life leave us in little doubt about the culture- andgenerat­ion- clashing jokes that will follow – and, sure enough, when he turns up at the lavish apartment of his son ( a chef specialisi­ng in molecular gastronomy) and his son’s doctor wife ( played by Thora Birch), it’s not long before he’s winding them up about their over- attentive parenting style. But as Rory starts bonding with his grandson and befriendin­g locals – among them Rosanna Arquette’s museum curator and Peter Coyote’s linguist – the film settles down into a less egregiousl­y quirky exploratio­n of the value of making up for lost time before it’s too late. ■

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Thunder Road; Ma; Godzilla: King of the Monsters; Sunset; Rory’s Way Clockwise from main:
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