The Morning Call

Paulson tries a little softness in twisted, tense love story

- By Michael Phillips Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic. mjphillips@chicago tribune.com

Actors want somewhere to go, you know? A starting point, and then a narrative road, straight or crooked, to get to somewhere else.

Streaming Friday on Hulu, “Run” gives the very busy and first-rate Sarah Paulson somewhere to go, which is one of its key strengths. It’s a familiar but enjoyably vindictive PG-13 thriller about mother/daughter trust issues. Plus a little psychopath­ology.

Co-writer and director Aneesh Chaganty’s movie is divided neatly into thirds. The first third ends with momlatenig­ht Googling “household neurotoxin­s,” never a sign of a safe space. At the two-thirds point, there’s a Big Reveal taking us into the third third, when things bust out into the open. Here, Paulson — lately of “American Horror Story” and “Ratched,” and the queen of murmuring, two-faced reassuranc­e — cracks open what she’s been concealing en route: a mother’s devotion, in extremis.

“Run” is a love story, highly conditiona­l. Chaganty and co-writer Sev Ohanian, who collaborat­ed on the auspicious Chaganty directoria­l debut “Searching” with John Cho, operate “Run” with a fairly crafty sense of tension. There is nothing funny about the prologue. In an scarily underlit operating room, we see Diane (Paulson), distraught, having just given birth to a premature baby. The prologue sets the initial tone with five on-screen title cards, listing medical conditions and their definition­s: arrhythmia, hemochroma­tosis, asthma, diabetes and paralysis.

Seventeen years later, daughter Chloe, played by Kiera Allen in a fine, empathetic feature debut, has adapted well to those five conditions. Mother and daughter live in a farmhouse on a quiet road, occasional­ly going into town for a movie. Chloe uses a wheelchair, an inhaler and her watchful instincts to cope with her physical challenges. She takes a variety of medication­s laid out, carefully, by mom, who tends her hydroponic garden with the same fastidious­ness.

A new day, Chloe hopes, is coming soon. She awaits news of her University of Washing

ton college applicatio­n (the film is set in the Seattle area). Diane’s private life focuses on her daughter, period. “Run” concerns what happens when the chick wants out of the nest, and mother bird would rather

that not happen.

There are several shameless sequences of suspense, including Chloe, having been locked in an upstairs room once she begins questionin­g her caregiver’s intentions, crawling out on

the second-story roof to relative safety. The set-up of “Run” is pure victimizat­ion-thriller material, although Chloe’s wiles, and her impressive velocity on wheels, prevent this PG-13 affair from getting too sadistic. The film rests solidly on the shoulders of its leading performers.

“Searching,” Chaganty’s previous feature, made well-sustained use of its relentless digital storytelli­ng via FaceTime chats and surveillan­ce camera footage. “Run” is devoted to more old-fashioned screens. It nods to various influences, from “Night Must Fall” to “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?” and rolls on. But as Cho proved in “Searching,” Chaganty knows how to keep the right actors front and center. And it’s the actors’ job, as always in the movies, to finesse the improbable developmen­ts, activate the juicy confrontat­ions and try a little honesty with everything in between.

MPAArating: PG-13 (for disturbing thematic content, some violence/terror and language)

Running time: 1:30

Premieres: Friday, Nov. 20, on Hulu.

 ?? ALLEN FRASER/HULU ?? Sarah Paulson and Kiera Allen (back to camera) in a scene from Hulu’s“Run.”
ALLEN FRASER/HULU Sarah Paulson and Kiera Allen (back to camera) in a scene from Hulu’s“Run.”

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