Los Angeles Times

Surf drama rides emotional waves

- — Robert Abele

There’s an alluring, almost ominous grace to the misty visuals of actor Simon Baker’s feature directoria­l debut “Breath”: many gorgeous waves on the Western Australian coast, ideal for surfing, but surrounded by an enveloping sense of risk, isolation and cloudiness.

Such is the thematic terrain for a coming-of-age story — adapted from Tim Winton’s novel — that finds a pair of adventurou­s teenage boys falling under the sway of a reclusive older surfer (Baker). What appeals to near-feral Loonie (Ben Spence) and thoughtful Pikelet (Samson Coulter) about their enigmatic new friend Sando — a onetime wave superstar living quietly with his wife, Eva (Elizabeth Debicki), a ski champion felled by injury — is his Zenlike board tutelage, but also how his unruffled demeanor overall suggests a path to a chill, beauty-laden adulthood.

But as the pair graduate from Styrofoam to fiberglass, trading their increasing­ly less appealing home lives for Sando’s mentorship, Pikelet uncovers a parallel narrative to his guru’s existence, one that makes him rethink his bravery lessons on the open seas.

Aided by Marden Dean’s cinematogr­aphy, Baker keenly captures the beckoning magnetism of active waters, not to mention the searching souls — young and experience­d — who gravitate toward its dangers. But on land he’s equally attentive to emotional turbulence, handling well the second act’s pivot toward sexual awakening, and the costs of untended dissatisfa­ction. “Breath” boasts no unique truths about maturing, but its serene roar under gray skies makes it a softly roiling, ultimately affecting gem. “Breath.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 56 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

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