Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Review: Bromance ‘The Climb’ a triumph of quirky filmmaking

- By MARK KENNEDY

Three-quarters through “The Climb” comes a scene we’ve all come to expect in a romantic comedy: A wedding is interrupte­d by the best man who rushes into a church during a marriage ceremony and screams “I object!”

He turns to the shocked bride and groom kneeling at the altar and — summoning all his courage — declares to one: “You deserve to be with someone who loves you for who you are.”

Pretty typical stuff. Only in this case, he’s talking to the groom.

Utterly original and utterly excellent, the modern bromance “The Climb” is a thrilling ride, an unconventi­onal and idiosyncra­tic American film that acts like a oldschool arty European one.

It’s the beautifull­y crafted creation of Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin, real-life best friends who star as best friends. They’ve written a touching and funny screenplay about modern masculinit­y with Covino directing, employing long single takes worthy of Sam Mendes.

“The Climb” charts the complex relationsh­ip between Mike (Covino) and Kyle (Marvin) over multiple years and through seven vignettes. They are in many ways opposite, but still bound together. Kyle is the sweeter one, accommodat­ing and often passive. Mike is the abrupt, too honest, loud and often selfish one.

“I don’t have many friends who know me,” Mike tells his friend at one point. Kyle responds: “I’m the only one who likes you and I don’t know why.”

Whenever Kyle falls in love with a woman, Mike has the irritating habit of inserting himself between the couple. And yet he gets forgiven, often pulled back into Kyle’s orbit by people — usually women

— who recognize how important the friendship is for the pair.

The filmmakers have embraced a naturalist­ic style, which enjoys dry and awkward exchanges and dark, sudden violent humor, like the Coen brothers or Martin McDonagh. During each chapter, viewers must figure out what has transpired since the last one ended, a repudiatio­n of passive film watching.

There are surreal touches throughout, including completely inappropri­ate music during some tense scenes and an out-of-leftfield use of Shawn Mullins’ “Lullaby.” There also are musical interludes, including four cemetery workers bursting into song and a slow motion montage of a duo ski dancing.

Covino and Marvin are clearly seeped in French cinema and make a lovely nod to it when Mike goes into a small movie theater to catch a French film retrospect­ive and, a little later, the camera swivels and the cinema becomes a church.

In one tour de force of filmmaking, the camera squirms though a crowded house on Thanksgivi­ng and then prowls the outside of the house in a sweep, with each figure inside stepping up to deliver a line or two in what seems like one continuous take. (Take that, “1917.”)

The script is also a marvel, with fragments of dialogue and actions repeating over the years — like motorists fighting or Mike playing with a hat in the mirror. Silence is also baked in, sometimes with wordless scenes of people outside smoking.

The acting is tremendous, with Marvin almost puppyish and sweet while Covino is sharp and brutally honest — his way of being kind. Gayle Rankin plays a love interest for Kyle and she is excellentl­y tart, prickly, and judgy. Talia Balsam makes her small but key maternal role shine bright.

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