The Denver Post

Portman’s directoria­l debut sadly falls flat

Drama. PG-13. 98 minutes.

- By Vanessa H. Larson

Disappoint­ingly true to its title, “A Tale of Love and Darkness” is dark and somber in just about every way. In her feature directoria­l debut — which she also wrote and stars in — Natalie Portman has adapted celebrated Israeli author Amos Oz’s 2002 autobiogra­phical novel of the same name into a dour and emotionall­y cold film.

Oz’s best-selling book chronicles his childhood in Mandatory Palestine and post-statehood Israel, the background to his birth as a writer. Set against this momentous historical period is the story of the author’s mother, Fania (Portman), a troubled woman who had a great impact on his life.

The Hebrew-language film opens in darkness, as Fania tells a bedtime story to young Amos (Amir Tessler), the pitch-black screen eventually giving way to shots of their hands and faces. An only child, Amos lives in Jerusalem with Fania, an unhappy housewife with a severe mien who is treated badly by both her mother and mother-in-law, and his intellectu­al father, Arieh (Gilad Kahana), a librarian and frustrated writer.

The narrator, who represents the 70-something Amos Oz today, explains that both Fania’s and Arieh’s families fled Europe due to anti-Semitism. As the years wear on, sensitive Fania becomes increasing­ly unable to cope with the hardships of life in Israel — which is very different from the promised land she had imagined — along with the burden of her unhappy marriage.

Were the story not already heavy, Portman’s interpreta­tion of Oz’s engaging and even humorous (if rambling) book lacks emotional resonance. The central characters remain distant from both each other and the viewer, their feelings seemingly muted. Amos mostly reacts to Fania’s parables and rumination­s with wide-eyed silence. Scenes with great dramatic potential — such as the 1947 U.N. vote to partition Palestine, which Amos’s family and neighbors hear on the radio — are presented with an inexplicab­le tone of detachment.

The movie is also gloomy on a visual level, from the family’s dreary house and drab clothes to the cinematogr­aphy, which emphasizes the darker, more yellowish colors of the spectrum in a way that evokes old photograph­s.

It’s intriguing to watch the American-raised Portman act in fluent Hebrew. The actress, who was born in Israel, spent many years getting the film off the ground and has said it was a labor of love that grew out of her deep admiration for Oz’s memoir. Unfortunat­ely, darkness seems to have prevailed over love in a tale that falls flat.

Rated PG-13.

 ?? Ruth Mendelson, Focus Features ?? Natalie Portman in “A Tale of Love and Darkness.”
Ruth Mendelson, Focus Features Natalie Portman in “A Tale of Love and Darkness.”

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