Orlando Sentinel

Garfield portrays disability advocate in dutiful biopic

- By Alan Zilberman

“Breathe” is meant, no doubt, as a sincere homage to the late disability advocate Robin Cavendish, who died, after living with polio for 36 years, in 1994.

Commission­ed by his son, producer Jonathan Cavendish — who plays a minor role in the film — and directed by Jonathan Cavendish’s business partner, actor Andy Serkis, the movie has the tone of a eulogy delivered by a dutiful son: affectiona­te, compliment­ary and maudlin. The story by screenwrit­er William Nicholson (“Everest”) jumps from one major episode in Robin’s life to another, but with none of those episodes delving into his interior life, “Breathe” remains a superficia­l tearjerker.

The tale begins in the late 1950s, with Andrew Garfield playing Robin as an athletic, dashing adventurer. Robin woos Diana (Claire Foy), and after they marry, they fly to Kenya on business.

But after Diana announces her pregnancy, her 28-year-old husband collapses, becomes paralyzed and can breathe only with the assistance of a ventilator. Upon returning to England, Robin grows depressed, yearning for death, but Diana will have none of it. Ignoring the warnings of his doctor, Robin — with Diana’s help — leaves the confines of the hospital.

From this point forward, “Breathe” follows Robin as he pushes for more and more freedom, ultimately designing — with the help of his inventor friend Teddy (Hugh Bonneville) — a line of mechanical chairs for the severely disabled.

When the movie sticks to the matter-of-fact — the difficulti­es of using an iron lung, for instance — it can be downright harrowing. One scene shows the young Jonathan unplugging the machine, without his mother’s knowledge, as his father feebly gasps for breath.

As an actor, Garfield accomplish­es a great deal with limited mobility, conveying — with his eyes alone — both resignatio­n at his circumstan­ce and frustratio­n that he cannot do more.

Famous for such motion-capture roles as Gollum in “The Lord of the Rings” and Caesar the chimpanzee in the “Planet of the Apes” franchises, Serkis, in his first time behind the camera, is a natural, filming his actors with affection, an overabunda­nce of light and a command of tone. Yet too much of “Breathe” relies on the predictabl­e tropes of the biopic.

Scenes in which Robin and Diana are told that they cannot do something — whether by doctors or relatives — are followed, in short order, by scenes of them perseverin­g in just that activity. (The film glosses over the question of how they arrived at such affluence). Once Robin has achieved an unpreceden­ted level of independen­ce, he turns his attention toward helping others in his condition. He makes for a convincing communicat­or, with a witty, informal speaking style that earns applause at every major milestone.

The film’s emotional core is the Cavendishe­s’ marriage. Best known for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth in the series “The Crown,” Foy is similarly taciturn here, delivering a performanc­e that is convincing in a role that doesn’t demand much of her except as it relates to Robin. The question of how the couple make do in the bedroom is answered, tastefully, yet many of their scenes alone together feel perfunctor­y.

After decades of living with polio, Robin undergoes a series of medical crises, leading him to make a draconian health decision. To its credit, “Breathe” avoids histrionic­s in favor of understate­ment, re-creating the bitterswee­t emotions that Robin’s family members must have felt.

 ?? DAVID BLOOMER/BLEECKER STREET-PARTICIPAN­T MEDIA MPAA rating: Running time: ?? Andrew Garfield and Claire Foy star as Robin and Diana Cavendish in a film produced by the Cavendishe­s’ son.
PG-13 (contains sexual situations and bloody medical imagery) 1:57
DAVID BLOOMER/BLEECKER STREET-PARTICIPAN­T MEDIA MPAA rating: Running time: Andrew Garfield and Claire Foy star as Robin and Diana Cavendish in a film produced by the Cavendishe­s’ son. PG-13 (contains sexual situations and bloody medical imagery) 1:57

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