New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

A memory both burning and fading in ‘Aftersun’

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If one were to rank the most difficult adolescent age, 11 may not be the first but it is certainly up there. It is just a horribly, hilariousl­y awkward moment of still being very much a kid but with an agonizingl­y heightened awareness of all those teenage things that are just out of reach. And it is just a moment after all, but when you’re in it, when you are just 11, the days are long, the weeks move slowly and years feels like a lifetime.

In “Aftersun,” writer-director Charlotte Wells invites the audience to go back to that age, in memory at least, with Sophie (Frankie Corio), age 11, and her father Calum (Paul Mescal), almost age 31, on holiday at a resort in Turkey. Sophie is the one rememberin­g here, 20 years later as she turns the age her father turned on that trip, which is pretty ordinary as far as middle-class vacations go in the mid-’90s. But this holiday will come to possess extraordin­ary significan­ce because it’s the last one Sophie will ever have with her dad.

We don’t learn many facts about Sophie and Calum. He obviously had her young

and is not with her mother anymore, though they still say “I love you” on the phone, which confuses Sophie. But from their first moments together on screen, there is a palpable tenderness between the two, even if they don’t get to spend much time together frequently. Young fathers, especially the single sort, don’t get a lot of love from the movies and “Aftersun” is partly an ode to that very specific, very sweet bond between father and pre-teen daughter that both kind of understand will change into something else soon.

Calum does not have a lot of money, but he has enough for this little resort, which has a pool and water slides and some excursions. There’s a beach, too, a pool table, some arcade games and karaoke one night. It is not, one might say, especially aspiration­al or Instagramm­able. It’s what

life looks like, or looked like then, when everybody wasn’t pretending to be a celebrity all the time. And thank goodness for the revelation that is Frankie Corio, who dresses, looks, acts and feels like a real kid and not an actor reading lines that an adult has written. Mescal, too, gets to flex, beautifull­y, in a complex role that doesn’t involve a tortured romance.

But this is just part of the lovely, evocative authentici­ty of “Aftersun,” in which an adult woman is trying to both remember and make sense of the father she loved dearly and has realized she also never really knew.

“Aftersun,” an A24 release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n for “brief sexual material and some language.” Running time: 96 minutes.

 ?? Associated Press ?? This image released by A24 shows Frankie Corio in a scene from “Aftersun.”
Associated Press This image released by A24 shows Frankie Corio in a scene from “Aftersun.”

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