The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Paterson’ director draws tender portrait of love

- By Ann Hornaday BLEEKER STREET MEDIA/TNS

“Paterson” arrives like a warm embrace in the midst of winter, its tenderness and compassion first inspiring the viewer to reach out and hug its characters, then the man who made it. Written and directed by Jim Jarmusch — who for three decades has personifie­d indie-film cool and ironic detachment — this love letter to love and letters feels both like a throwback and an improbably bold leap forward.

Adam Driver plays Paterson, a bus driver in Paterson, N.J., who wakes up at 6:15 every morning, goes to work, spends his day eavesdropp­ing on passengers, comes home to his wife Laura (Golshifteh Farahani), walks their dog, stops at the corner bar for one beer, returns home, goes to bed, and starts all over again the next morning. Paterson is a creature of habit with the soul of an artist — he composes simple, carefully crafted poems which appear on screen while he works them out in his head — whereas Laura’s creative life is chaotic and ever-changing. Whatever she’s obsessed with, Paterson unconditio­nally supports her, even when her mania for black-andwhite design threatens to drown him in a sea of polka dots, stripes and swirls.

There’s little narrative tension in “Paterson,” aside from one or two random encounters Paterson has in the bar, and an episode involving the bus. What becomes clear in the course of the movie is that Jarmusch has constructe­d his own version of a poem, with recurring images and themes that allow him to delve into the nature of commitment, artistic ambition and how inner life is shaped by the tidal pull of place and history.

Laura knows that her husband is a great poet. He could join the ranks of fellow Patersonia­n Allen Ginsberg, but he’s adamantly undriven. In fact, he’s a driver in Paterson, played by a Driver as Paterson, a nifty example of the motif of twins and doubles that Jarmusch plays with throughout a movie whose circular structure begins to feel as comforting as a familiar song — in this case, an anthem to a city that not only produced Ginsberg, but the boxer Hurricane Carter, the comedian Lou Costello and the anarchist Gaetano Bresci.

Lyrical, winsome and unhurried, “Paterson” finds Jarmusch attentive to the same straightfo­rward visual compositio­n and human foibles that graced such early films as “Stranger in Paradise” and “Down By Law,” as well as his succeeding works. But unlike much of the filmmaker’s oeuvre, “Paterson” is characteri­zed by a sincerity so disarming that at first it feels like it might be put on. The seasoned Jarmusch fan may wait for the absurdist shoe to drop, but it never does — or at least not on the film’s striving protagonis­ts.

Instead, viewers are treated to a portrait of romantic devotion, contentmen­t and vocation all the more affecting for being so utterly, unapologet­ically heartfelt. Jarmusch draws a tender portrait of love, in this case of two people nurturing one another’s most fragile dreams and guarding them anew, day in and day out.

 ??  ?? Adam Driver plays Paterson and Golshifteh Farahani is Laura in “Paterson” directed by Jim Jarmusch.
Adam Driver plays Paterson and Golshifteh Farahani is Laura in “Paterson” directed by Jim Jarmusch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States