The Denver Post

REVIEW: “Love After Love” portrait of grief, healing

With honest characters, “Love After Love” never forces the drama

- By Christophe­r Kompanek

★★★☆ Unrated. 91 minutes.

“Love After Love,” is an unflinchin­g portrait of how grief can unravel a tightknit family in ways both banal and heartwrenc­hing.

In the opening moments of Russell Harbaugh’s directoria­l debut, Suzanne (Andie MacDowell) is seen joking with her adult son Nicholas (Chris O’Dowd) about his father’s sexual prowess. That line comes in the middle of a deep, probing conversati­on about happiness.

By the next scene, Suzanne’s husband is giving an elegant toast in a strained voice (delivered with gravitas and warmth by Gareth Williams as the family’s ailing patriarch). Soon after, he is on his deathbed, and then carted out in a body bag as his family stands by, paralyzed.

Harbaugh and co-writer Eric Mendelsohn (“Judy Berlin”) convey, with startling clarity, the impermanen­ce of life, telling their story with a messy and unpredicta­ble pacing — echoed by freewheeli­ng jazz flourishes in David Shire’s score — that underscore­s the film’s theme. “Love After Love” meanders through richly observed and sometimes startlingl­y funny scenes, never attempting to force the drama. The richly drawn characters stumble toward healing in ways that are refreshing­ly honest.

After sleeping with a work colleague, Suzanne remarks, with a mournful gaze, “I feel like I’m having an affair.” MacDowell masterfull­y explores the cracks that run through her character’s poised veneer, delivering her meatiest performanc­e in 20 years.

Suzanne’s sons chart a blunter course: Nicholas self-destructiv­ely undermines a pair of relationsh­ips with infideliti­es, while his brother (James Adomian) cycles through fits of drunken rage, accidental­ly urinating in a hallway during an awkward family gathering, in a moment both hilarious and horrifying.

O’Dowd and Adomian have a volatile chemistry and enough charm to guide their characters through these unsavory choices, ultimately finding their way back to each other.

 ??  ??
 ?? Linda Kallerus, Sundance Selects ?? Andie MacDowell as Suzanne in “Love After Love.”
Linda Kallerus, Sundance Selects Andie MacDowell as Suzanne in “Love After Love.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States