Los Angeles Times

‘Boy Erased’

Lucas Hedges’ transcende­nt acting elevates a thoughtful but muted drama

- JUSTIN CHANG justin.chang@latimes.com

For much of “Boy Erased,” we are watching the face of 19-year-old Jared Eamons as he takes in his surroundin­gs. It’s a handsome, intelligen­t face — it belongs to the actor Lucas Hedges — and its range of expression­s subtly distills the drama of this somber, coolly appalled and appalling movie. You note Jared’s dutiful attentiven­ess as his father preaches a sermon, his furtive downward glance in the company of a boy he likes and his quiet anguish when he finally approaches his parents and disgorges the long-held secret of his homosexual­ity.

Some time later — or perhaps earlier, given writer-director Joel Edgerton’s deft shuffling of time frames — Jared will find himself with a group of people, mostly young men, dressed in white button-up shirts that suggest a declaratio­n of collective purity. At times he scans the room to see if anyone else shares his skepticism, despair and growing alarm, but those who enter the Christian ex-gay program known as Love in Action are generally advised to keep their eyes off each other and on the program’s strict director, Victor Sykes (Edgerton).

Hedges’ silent scream of a performanc­e, more internaliz­ed than his excellent work in “Manchester by the Sea” and the recent “Mid90s,” both complement­s and counters the soul-smothering heaviness of Sykes’ agenda. “Boy Erased” is based on Garrard Conley’s 2016 memoir about his experience as an Arkansas teenager, when his Baptist parents sent him to Memphis for gay conversion therapy. The movie’s moral position on Love in Action is clear enough, but to its credit, it seeks to articulate that position without cheap histrionic­s or easy condemnati­ons, to summon restraint in depicting an ideologica­l campaign that has no particular use for nuance.

Edgerton, always a superb actor, is also a shrewd and attentive filmmaker, as showed in his underappre­ciated 2015 psychologi­cal thriller, “The Gift.” His knack for evoking domestic tension especially animates the tense, difficult scenes of Jared’s home life after he is outed as gay to his parents by someone he thought was a friend, under circumstan­ces that constitute their own cruel form of violation.

Jared’s parents, Marshall and Nancy, are played by Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman, and like Edgerton the two actors have closeted their native Australian­ness in service of a well textured and reasonably convincing snapshot of Southern suburbia. Kidman’s steely grace illuminate­s the plight of the doting, sympatheti­c Nancy, who responds to her son’s admission by sadly closing her eyes but not, crucially, her mind or heart. Crowe, meanwhile, conveys Marshall’s natural affection for his son but also his instinctiv­e willingnes­s to suppress it, to bark orders and demand answers in lieu of listening. That difficult dynamic is replicated, with a much more toxic level of obtuseness, at Love in Action, where Jared is sent after surprising­ly little family discussion. From there, “Boy Erased,” shot in dim, muted colors and accompanie­d by agitated orchestral strings, proceeds with the coolly rehe strained tension of an arthouse horror movie. Or perhaps a prison movie, the kind that might bring back chilling memories of your company’s last employee retreat, only with more God talk and ritual self-humiliatio­n.

Sykes, a drill sergeant in a necktie, runs the show with a few scowling deputies on hand. They confiscate their charges’ cellphones and other personal possession­s, and warn them against drinking, viewing pornograph­y or engaging in more than cursory physical touch. New enrollees are forced to diagram any deviant branches in their family trees (abuse, alcoholism, etc.), and also to excoriate themselves and especially their parents in extended group confession­als.

“Boy Erased” is far gloomier and more singlemind­ed than Desiree Akhavan’s recent drama “The Miseducati­on of Cameron Post,” which tackled the same subject from a young woman’s point of view and, like “Girl, Interrupte­d” or “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” found solace and humor in the personal bonds that developed between inmates. Edgerton’s picture, by contrast, searches mostly in vain for signs of solidarity and resistance within Love in Action, whose more battle-hardened members warn Jared that unless he plays his cards right, his stay might be more permanent than he’d been led to believe.

The program’s fire-and-brimstone drudgery is mercifully relieved by flashbacks to Jared’s more carefree college days, specifical­ly his separate encounters with two very different young men (played by Joe Alwyn and Théodore Pellerin). Nei- ther episode plays out quite as you might expect from a movie about the intensity of carnal desire and the dangers of trying to stifle it — a refreshing narrative tack in a movie that suggests the pitfalls of subjecting either religious belief or sexual orientatio­n to a one-size-fits-all mentality.

Jared, we learn, has a talent for writing, and also for thinking and listening. As a gay man who has spent his whole life under a God-fearing roof, he’s used to making peace with inner tension, and he gravitates toward balance in every situation. Hedges captures that ambivalenc­e beautifull­y, and also the moment when he decides to stop going with he flow. But for reasons that have less to do with him than with the screenplay, he doesn’t fully illuminate one important aspect of Jared’s journey. Unlike last year’s drama “Novitiate,” which examined the tension between spiritual devotion and gay desire in an even more cloistered setting, “Boy Erased” doesn’t seem particular­ly interested in the inner spiritual life of its characters. Not Jared’s parents, whose love for God permeates every aspect of their daily routine, and crucially not Jared himself, whose divine encounters are limited to a scene of him cursing the heavens in anger. Given its focus on church and community, the movie seems curiously reluctant to broach the subject of God in more intimate, relational and compassion­ate terms.

I object to this omission partly on representa­tional grounds — the teachings of groups like Love in Action should not, and do not, speak for all Christiani­ty — but also, more important, on dramatic ones. In framing Jared’s conflict through the lens of a morally repressive and intellectu­ally bankrupt program, rather than of his own much more valuable interior dialogue, the movie sacrifices a deeper, more intimate kind of insight. “Boy Erased” is a sobering, justly infuriatin­g movie, but its own convenient elisions keep catharsis at bay.

 ?? Focus Features ?? A YOUNG MAN’S desires land him in conversion therapy. Lucas Hedges, right, with Théodore Pellerin.
Focus Features A YOUNG MAN’S desires land him in conversion therapy. Lucas Hedges, right, with Théodore Pellerin.

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