The Day

A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHO­OD

- New movies this week

PG, 108 minutes. Starts Friday at Niantic, Madison Art Cinemas. Starts tonight at Mystic Luxury Cinemas, Waterford, Stonington, Westbrook, Lisbon. Filmmaker Marielle Heller has an extraordin­ary talent for expressing the essence of a character through cinematic style. The chameleoni­c ability to visualize a story and the nature of the person at the center is a uniquely challengin­g task, one that requires both a special kind of insight and a willingnes­s to disguise oneself in the material. In her third feature, “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborho­od,” Heller has mastered this, infusing her film with the gentle spirit and good-natured soul of the iconic American children’s show host Fred Rogers. Where Heller’s “Diary of a Teenage Girl” was a whirlwind of hormones and fantasy inspired by the graphic novel, and “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” a wordy, melancholy rumination on a life’s lost potential, “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborho­od” is patient. It is kind. It stops and takes a minute (literally) to simply be present, to be grateful. It is a kind of gentle and deeply affecting filmmaking that is completely original and reflective of Rogers himself. The film opens with a re-creation of the iconic introducti­on to “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” in which Tom Hanks, as Rogers, hits every beat of the song, zipping up a cardigan, tossing loafers and tying laces. He brings out a picture board, revealing photos of his friends: Lady Aberlin, King Friday XIII and his new friend, Lloyd Vogel (Matthew Rhys), looking stunned and bloody. The surreal moment sets the tone, which isn’t a biopic but an exploratio­n of Rogers’ philosophy in action, a test of his power on a cynical man who believes himself broken. Written by Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster, the film is inspired by a 1998 Esquire story by Tom Junod titled, “Can You Say… Hero?” Fitzerman-Blue and Harpster imagine Lloyd as an investigat­ive journalist with a hard-hitting reputation. He’s a new father but mired in his own ire toward his own father (Chris Cooper), with whom he’s recently brawled at his own sister’s wedding. Heller blends formats to pay tribute to Rogers’ chosen tool for building empathy: the television. She invokes the style of his show and toggles between the boxy televisual format of Pittsburgh public access TV to widescreen cinematic style. Rogers’ TV show enabled him to speak directly to children, and he used the access to make challengin­g feelings understand­able. — Katie Walsh, Tribune News Service

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