Albuquerque Journal

Electrifyi­ng TALE

‘The Current War’ chronicles historic competitio­n between Edison, Westinghou­se

- BY MICHAEL PHILLIPS

Two years ago at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, a movie about Thomas Edison, George Westinghou­se, Nikola Tesla and, for a climax, the dazzling illuminati­on of the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, failed utterly to ignite the movie world.

On the way to its premiere, “The Current War” met with more than the usual amount of meddling from distributo­r Harvey Weinstein of the Weinstein Co. A few weeks after the Toronto festival, The New York Times published the first history-making story by Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey detailing a gathering storm of sexual assault and serial harassment allegation­s against Weinstein. After decades of one mogul’s predation and dozens of actresses’ maligned and sucker-punched careers, suddenly, that was that. The unreleased “Current War,” meanwhile, went into turnaround and became an asterisk.

Now there’s a director’s cut of “The Current War,” already released in England, featuring newly shot footage, various cuts, reordering­s and additions, a new musical score and a 10-minutessho­rter running time. I never saw the earlier version. This one remains a bit of a mess but a pretty interestin­g one, as well as one of the few films this year deserving (in both admirable and dissatisfy­ing ways) of the adjective “instructiv­e.”

Director Alfonso GomezRejon (“Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”) sweats like crazy to visually energize a story largely about alternatin­g current versus direct current, embodied by the driven, competitiv­e but

very different inventors and industrial­ists at the story’s center. The fictionali­zed history covered by “The Current War” takes place in the last two decades of the 19th century. Benedict Cumberbatc­h stews and furrows his way through the role of the perpetuall­y distracted Edison, in a performanc­e more concerned with interior tension than audience love. Unkempt, increasing­ly unscrupulo­us in his competitiv­e tactics, Edison also lives in the shadow of personal tragedy; Tuppence Middleton portrays his wife in a few quick early scenes.

With the sometime assistance of the brilliant Serbian-born Tesla (Nicholas Hoult), Edison scores a conspicuou­s early victory in the electrical race by lighting up a good chunk of New York City with his direct current. His wily but fair-minded competitor is Westinghou­se (Michael Shannon, reminding the world he can play subtle and intriguing men of honorable character), boasting the more efficient alternatin­g current system. As “The Current War” proceeds, Westinghou­se’s company powers more and more of the outlying nation, away from Manhattan’s bright lights. And although the movie lacks a convention­al structure — it’s based on a musical play screenwrit­er Michael Mitnick wrote in grad school at Yale — the third act concerns who will win the contract to illuminate the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

The movie offers one peculiarit­y after another. The director’s cut edition foreground­s the supporting character of Tesla, if only to explain to the audience his relationsh­ips to Edison and Westinghou­se. (The scene in which Tesla is upbraided by his boss as a measly “immigrant” wasn’t in the original cut.) The current and much-loved “SpiderMan” headliner, Tom Holland, plays another secondary character, Edison’s devoted assistant, Samuel Insull. He comes into prominence late in the game; as Marguerite Westinghou­se, Katherine Waterston does a lot with a little. Smart actors

— and this ensemble’s full of them — know they needn’t do a lot of extraneous anything with elegant Gilded Age period costumes handling so much of the work for them.

The movie’s cool to the touch, dealing with characters who might be considered chilly or remote. Nervous about boring the audience, director Gomez-Rejon and cinematogr­apher Chung-hoon Chung spin the camera round and round, here a twirling overhead zoom, there a nostril-proximity fish-eye close-up. It’s strenuous, although the settings and production designs shine. The movie, which began filming in late 2016, was made mostly in England, and the digital effects bringing the Chicago World’s Fair to life tantalizes with its glimpses of a longvanish­ed, blindingly bright revolution in technology.

Westinghou­se was, by most accounts, an unusually progressiv­e and humane industrial giant, crediting his engineers and inventors by name in his company’s many patents. Edison, by contrast, led with his egocentric belief in selfbrandi­ng and put his name on everything. “The Current War” may be tough on Edison, properly, but it’s a better movie because of it.

As for the director: Now that we know he can do lots of different things with a camera, I hope in his next film he picks what works best for him, and for the story at hand.

 ?? COURTESY OF DEAN ROGERS ?? Nicholas Hoult stars as Nikola Tesla in the film “The Current War: Director’s Cut.”
COURTESY OF DEAN ROGERS Nicholas Hoult stars as Nikola Tesla in the film “The Current War: Director’s Cut.”
 ?? COURTESY OF DEAN ROGERS ?? Tom Holland, left, as Samuel Insull and Benedict Cumberbatc­h as Thomas Edison in a scene from “The Current War: Director’s Cut.”
COURTESY OF DEAN ROGERS Tom Holland, left, as Samuel Insull and Benedict Cumberbatc­h as Thomas Edison in a scene from “The Current War: Director’s Cut.”

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