The Guardian (USA)

Our Son review – Billy Porter and Luke Evans are gay dads in poignant custody battle

- Leslie Felperin

This poignant drama is practicall­y a remake of Kramer vs Kramer from 1979 – though this time with two divorcing New York-based dads fighting for custody of their kid instead of K2’s traditiona­l pairing of a husband and wife. And like the older Dustin HoffmanMer­yl Streep vehicle, Our Son is a bit soapy and middlebrow, but impeccably performed all-round, led by a trio of terrific turns from Luke Evans and Billy Porter as the two fathers, with winning, winsome support from Christophe­r Woodley as Owen, their eightyear-old son.

The script, co-written by Peter Nickowitz and director Bill Oliver, delivers an acute, subtly shaded group portrait of current gay lifestyles, from married-with-children types like Nicky (Evans) and Gabriel (Porter), who are monogamous until Gabriel strays without pre-agreement into another’s man’s arms, to older men who never wanted that kind of domesticit­y, to young ones still having one-night hook-ups out on the scene. And that’s just the guys – there are also some lesbian characters represente­d, not least Pam (Robin Weigert), Nicky’s family law attorney who is full of good advice.

In a very believable dynamic, Gabriel isn’t quite sure why he’s fallen out of love with Nicky, but the shift in feeling is irreparabl­e and once spoken there’s no going back. The goal is to manage the separation, divorce and custody decision with a minimum of damage to Owen, a sensitive kid who is neverthele­ss more resilient than he seems. The film touches on how Owen was conceived via an egg donor and a surrogate, but responsibl­y underscore­s that in the eyes of the law both Nicky and Gabriel are his fathers, even if it is Nicky who is biological­ly the father.

At times, the film feels a little didactic, as if designed to inform straight friends and relatives on the issues of same-sex marriage and divorce, like the straight if supportive members of Nicky’s family we meet later on. Neverthele­ss, there’s a generosity of spirit here that makes the mildly preachy moments forgivable. All the characters are rounded, fallible and likable in equal measure, and even if the score is a bit syrupy, it’s a pleasant, engaging watch.

• Our Son is on digital platforms in the UK from 25 March.

 ?? ?? Billy Porter and Luke Evans in Our Son. Photograph: Amy Mayes/ThreeTwelv­e Media
Billy Porter and Luke Evans in Our Son. Photograph: Amy Mayes/ThreeTwelv­e Media

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