Los Angeles Times

A mess of a family in a mess of a film

- — Robert Abele

When mom (Juliette Lewis) goes to jail for killing their abusive dad, introverte­d, undereduca­ted son Harley (Alex Pettyfer) proves wholly unequipped to take care of his three younger sisters — obnoxious, promiscuou­s teenager Amber (Nicola Peltz), embittered Misty (Chiara Aurelia) and observant 6-yearold Jodie (Hala Finley) — in the rural melodrama “Back Roads.”

Like ersatz Tennessee Williams fed through a family-secrets algorithm, this scattersho­t adaptation of Tawni O’Dell’s 1999 novel, which she co-wrote with Adrian Lyne and which Pettyfer directed, is best described as earnestly disturbing. Though there’s an abiding sensitivit­y in the oftennoiri­sh approach to the story’s many traumas and its characters’ flailing attempts at coping, as a whole it’s something of a tonal mess.

You can tell Pettyfer likes the complicati­ons, the unease and the off hand tenderness in the scenario of an insecure, stricken young man pulled and pushed by the strong females around him, including a dissatisfi­ed 10years-older housewife (Jennifer Morrison) whose affair with Harley is the best thing in the movie. Though Pettyfer himself is too old and heartthrob­by for the role, he plays against it enough to make Harley a commanding­ly broken protagonis­t. But there’s a potboiler plot that must win out, and its poorly handled revelation­s nearly sink the film. “Back Roads” is that peculiar kind of disappoint­ment: a wreck about wreckage.

“Back Roads.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. Playing: Laem-mle Monica, Santa Monica; also on VOD.

 ?? Samuel Goldwyn Films ?? ALEX PETTYFER, left, and June Carryl in “Back Roads,” a sensitive film done in by a potboiler plot.
Samuel Goldwyn Films ALEX PETTYFER, left, and June Carryl in “Back Roads,” a sensitive film done in by a potboiler plot.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States