The Scotsman

Domestic horror

In Pieces of a Woman, Vanessa Kirby and Shia Labeouf play a couple who endure a traumatic birth, while One Night in Miami is inspired by a meeting between Black icons of 1960s America

- Alistair Harkness @ aliharknes­s

Pieces of a Woman ( 15) ✪ ✪ ✪

One Night in Miami ( 15) ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪

The opening scenes of Pieces of a Woman play like a naturalist­ic horror movie, economical­ly setting us up for a traumatic event with quickly sketched scenes of an extended family preparing for the imminent arrival of a newborn. The fissures that will soon crack this family apart are already apparent in the chalkand- cheese relationsh­ip between expectant mother Martha ( Vanessa Kirby), an executive at some kind of high- tech firm in downtown Boston, and father- to- be Sean ( Shia Labeouf), a roughneck constructi­on worker with addiction issues and a chip on his shoulder. But these fissures are exacerbate­d too by Martha’s well- todo mother, Elizabeth, whom we first meet buying the couple a family car – an act of generosity that Sean can’t help but view as a passive aggressive attempt to emasculate him. That Elizabeth is played by Ellen Burstyn only intensifie­s the already ominous atmosphere: her casting feels like a sly nod to her iconic role in The Exorcist, even if what’s about to shatter this family has nothing to do with God or the Devil, but the more commonplac­e tragedy of childbirth gone wrong. ( Incidental­ly, this kind of dread- by- associatio­n meta- casting extends even into the small roles: Martha’s car- salesman bother- in- law is played by Bennie Safdie, co- director of last year’s ultra nerve- wracking Uncut Gems).

The movie is only five minutes in when Hungarian director Kornél Mundruczó ( White God) starts ratcheting up the air of despair by taking us from the tentative bliss of what should be a routine home birth to the full- scale agony of a baby in distress, via a sustained

25- minute single shot of such virtuosic verisimili­tude it’s almost too much to bear. That’s the point, though. Labeouf and, especially, Kirby do incredible work to draw us into a situation no one in their right mind would want to experience and they’re compliment­ed here by Molly Parker as the couple’s midwife, whose status as a last- minute replacemen­t becomes a focal point of the unfolding tragedy. Mundruczó and screenwrit­er Kata Wéber also structure the scene in such a way as to leave plenty of ambiguity with regards to what’s going wrong, something that helps capture the disorienta­ting chaos of childbirth when complicati­ons do arise.

And yet the film, like the characters, never fully recovers from the impact of this moment. After the title card finally pops up on screen after 30 intense minutes, the ensuing drama unfolds elliptical­ly as we rejoin Sean and Martha – though mostly Martha – on random days over the subsequent eight months. As a formalisti­c conceit, watching the gestation of a life torn apart by childbirth over a nine- month period is certainly preferable to the legal drama the filmmakers could have pursued ( and which we get snatches of ) had this been a more convention­al film. And yet they also undercut their approach with on- the- nose symbolism and melodramat­ic plot turns that feel like they've been imported from a John Grisham adaptation. There's even a weirdly contrived and anachronis­tic twist that depends on a photograph being developed in an actual dark room, which for a present- day set movie makes no sense and threatens to rip you out of the film at what should be its dramatic high point. Despite these flaws, there remains plenty to admire, not least Kirby's titular performanc­e, which is steely yet brittle and never once tries to milk our sympathies.

Racial politics are at the heart of One Night in Miami, actor Regina King’s superbly entertaini­ng directoria­l debut about an extraordin­ary meeting of minds on the night Cassius Clay ( soon to be Muhammad Ali) beat Sonny Liston to become the boxing heavyweigh­t champion of the world. The minds in question belong to Clay ( Eli Goree), Malcom X ( Kingsley BenAdir), Sam Cooke ( Leslie Odom Jr) and Jim Brown ( Aldis Hodge), who really did all meet up in February of 1964, a fact King uses as a jumping off point for a kind of cultural and political summit that imagines these four titans of Black American life shooting the breeze while also debating their respective beliefs and conflictin­g ideas on empowermen­t.

At the centre of the drama is Clay's imminent conversion to Islam at the urging of Malcolm X, who was himself splitting from the Nation of Islam and starting his own organisati­on ( and thus viewed Clay as something of a prize asset). Clay in turn isn't 100 percent sold on giving up the vices readily available to him with his newfound fame and status. Cooke and Brown, meanwhile, are ruminating on their own futures, the former all too aware that his status as a top- selling R& B star is dependent on projecting a certain political neutrality to his largely white audience, and the latter contemplat­ing a transition into the movies after realising that his days as an American football star have taken him about as far as it's possible to go.

Adapting the film from his own 2013 play of the same name, screenwrit­er Kemp Powers – who co- wrote and co- directed Pixar's recent Soul – injects the dialogue

Regina King avoids the pitfalls inherent in One Night in Miami, broadening the play out with cinematic flair

and the speeches with an enjoyable theatrical­ity, though as a director King also takes care to avoid the stagey pitfalls inherent in the material, broadening the play out with real cinematic flair. Likewise her cast make the most of the premise to dig deep and give a more nuanced sense of who these men were when not performing for a public whose attention required their eternal vigilance.

Pieces of a Woman is streaming on Netflix; One Night in Miami is on limited cinematic release and will stream on Amazon Prime from 15 January.

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Pieces of a Woman, main and right; One Night in Miami, above
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