Orlando Sentinel

Orlando filmmaker making ‘Waves’ with movie

- By Hal Boedeker

One of the year’s best films, the searing family drama “Waves,” comes from a director living in Orlando. Rolling Stone dubs Trey Edward Shults “one major young filmmaker.”

Shults, 31, is also writer, co-editor, a producer and a music editor on “Waves,” which opens Wednesday at Enzian Theater in Maitland.

Rich in color, sound and swirling camera movements, “Waves” limits the dialogue as it follows teen siblings Tyler (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and Emily (Taylor Russell in a breakout performanc­e).

“Hopefully it feels immersive, that you’re living it with the characters’ perspectiv­e, with Tyler and then Emily,” Shults said in an interview. “If I can tell a story visually and put that over dialogue, I get really excited.”

Reviewers are excited by Shults. Michael Phillips, of

the Chicago Tribune, said “Waves” is “both unpredicta­ble and powerful in its impact.” Manohla Dargis in The New York Times writes: “‘Waves’ is the story of a Florida family nearly undone by a shocking tragedy. It’s also a spectacula­r testament to the talents of the writer-director Trey Edward Shults, making just his third feature-length movie.”

Shults’ earlier “Krisha” (2015) and “It Comes at Night” (2017) dealt with family. He met Harrison on the latter film and wrote Tyler for him. The role, Shults said, fuses his own experience­s with those of Harrison. Shults, raised by his mother and stepfather, reunited with his biological father shortly before the man died in 2013.

In “Waves,” Emmy winner Sterling K. Brown (“This Is Us”) plays the teens’ stern father, and Tony winner Renée Elise Goldsberry (“Hamilton”) portrays their concerned stepmother.

“I’m a lucky man,” Shults says of his cast. “We built it together to where at the end it felt like a beautiful, collaborat­ive family.”

When the film pauses for dialogue, the results can be shattering. Phillips called attention to a scene between the father and Emily, saying it’s “just about perfect.”

“To me, that’s the heartbeat scene of the film, and the whole film is leading to that scene,” Shults said. “We just got out of the way, and just wanted to let the actors act. You’re dealing with two amazing actors.”

The focus on family sets “Waves” apart from many year-end movies. “Family is very important for me, man, trying to explore the good and bad of family and the gray and everything in between because we’re complex human beings,” he said. “It can be a powerful thing seeing how a family can fall apart but also come back together after the worst tragedy.”

“Waves” filmed mostly in Broward County in South Florida. But there is a scene at Weeki Wachee, “one of my favorite places on

Earth,” Shults said.

Shults said he has been in Orlando a few years and listed what he and his girlfriend enjoy, including their house, their neighborho­od, the restaurant­s, Disney and the kayaking.

Would he film here? “Who knows? Maybe. I love Orlando,” Shults said.

He said he had no idea about his next film. “I’m a blank slate. I put it all in this movie,” he said.

Enzian hopes that he will attend some screenings, and Shults said he admired the Maitland theater.

Matthew Curtis, programmin­g director at Enzian, said “Waves” is “incredibly bold filmmaking, powerful and heartbreak­ing, bursting with extraordin­arily vivid performanc­es that are hard to shake.”

It’s very unusual for Enzian to present a main feature by a local filmmaker. “‘The Blair Witch Project’ 20 years ago may be the last time this has happened,” Curtis said.

As for awards talk, Shults said, “It’s humbling, it’s great to hear it, you never know how any of that stuff will go. I’m just trying to get this movie out there and just trying to get word of mouth.” He added, “There’s a ton of great movies right now. I just hope ours can break through.”

So spread the word: We have a major filmmaker living in our community.

 ?? PAUL BEST/GETTY ?? Trey Edward Shults, center, stands with cast members Kelvin Harrison Jr., from left, Alexa Demie, Taylor Russell and Sterling K. Brown at the Telluride Film Festival.
PAUL BEST/GETTY Trey Edward Shults, center, stands with cast members Kelvin Harrison Jr., from left, Alexa Demie, Taylor Russell and Sterling K. Brown at the Telluride Film Festival.
 ?? A24 ?? Kelvin Harrison Jr., left, and Sterling K. Brown star in Orlando filmmaker’s movie “Waves.”
A24 Kelvin Harrison Jr., left, and Sterling K. Brown star in Orlando filmmaker’s movie “Waves.”
 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN/ LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Director Trey Edward Shults, from the film “Waves,” at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.
JAY L. CLENDENIN/ LOS ANGELES TIMES Director Trey Edward Shults, from the film “Waves,” at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.

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