Los Angeles Times

Moving portrait of sibling bonds

- By Carlos Aguilar

Avoiding mawkish trappings, terminal illness drama “My Little Sister,” from directing duo Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond — Switzerlan­d’s contender for the internatio­nal feature film Oscar — centers on a woman whose ties to men and her mother have impacted her profession­al fulfillmen­t.

Twins born to an artistic family, Lisa (Nina Hoss) and Sven (Lars Eidinger), an actor fighting cancer, understand each other best through storytelli­ng. The screenplay’s nimble delivery of exposition in organic dialogue illuminate­s how their presence in each other’s lives reliably saves them from their respective woes.

Eidinger gives into the physical pain of his character, starved for the stage and wilting away, without abandoning the suave arrogance of a formerly successful thespian. Married and raising two children, an already overwhelme­d Lisa, a playwright with scarce time to write, shifts her focus to caring for her older (by two minutes) brother.

“I have plans too,” she tells her husband Martin (Jens Albinus). His position at an elite school interferes with her goals. Amid the emotional upheaval and her partner’s inflexibil­ity, the mundane act of taking a shower seems to offer the only reprise from the maternal, marital and fraternal demands that consume her. It’s in those details that the writing excels.

Hoss (“Phoenix,” “Barbara”), one of Europe’s most splendid actresses, renders an interpreta­tion grounded on Lisa’s profound desperatio­n to properly fulfill all the roles on her plate while trying to preserve her ill brother’s spirits. More importantl­y, her pronounced facial expression­s, often charged with disbelief, speak to how she feels about those dismissing her concerns or solutions. Hoss masterfull­y doses that repressed rage.

Classical music accentuate­s liminal scenes that signal her futile efforts to regain control of her life. Inching closer to her breaking point with each frustratin­g exchange, and with Sven’s state deteriorat­ing, Lisa chooses to write. The agile camera, handheld by cinematogr­apher Filip Zumbrunn, contribute­s a graceful realism with its closeness to their every move.

Since it’s missing substance about the pair’s relationsh­ip over the years to justify the like-mindedness of their bond, some of the story’s beats don’t congeal. Notwithsta­nding that narrative quibble, “My Little Sister” is frank and poignant.

With a distinctiv­e angle and the rawness of the cast’s first-rate performanc­es, Chuat and Reymond elevate a premise that could have, in other hands, veered into the realm of the uninspired.

 ?? Film Movement ?? NINA HOSS and Lars Eidinger star in Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond’s “My Little Sister.”
Film Movement NINA HOSS and Lars Eidinger star in Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond’s “My Little Sister.”

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