The Norwalk Hour

Uneven comedy-drama ‘My Wonderful Wanda’ has a dash of ‘Parasite’ and a smidgen of ‘Juno’

- By Ann Hornaday

“My Wonderful Wanda” Unrated. Contains sexual situations and mature themes. Running time: 110 minutes. 66 (out of four)

We meet Wanda on a bus from Poland to Germany, where she is returning to work for a prosperous family in their gracious lakeside villa. The patriarch has suffered a stroke and is bedridden; he’s sent all the other help away. He wants Wanda back. There’s also work to do preparing for his upcoming 70th birthday celebratio­n, which his wife is determined to throw even amid suboptimal conditions.

Such are the broad outlines of “My Wonderful Wanda,” an engrossing but uneven comedydram­a by Bettina Oberli. Agnieszka

Grochowska is intriguing­ly opaque as the title character, a pretty, self-possessed woman who demonstrat­es her shrewdness during an early salary negotiatio­n: She’s sharply aware of her options in every and all situations.

Those include not just her relationsh­ip with paterfamil­ias Josef (André Jung), but his grown children Gregi (Jacob Matschenz), who harbors a crush on Wanda, and Sophie (Birgit Minichmayr), a competitiv­e, temperamen­tal daughter who bristles at Wanda’s presence and sees her as a threat.

“My Wonderful Wanda” is cleverly structured as three separate trips that Wanda takes to Germany, each under dramatical­ly different circumstan­ces. And Oberli aspires to infuse the film with comic edge: This is a meditation on class conflict reminiscen­t of “Parasite” (with a dash of atavistic German-Polish rivalry), leavened by “Juno”-esque screwball elements. Unfortunat­ely, that tonal balance isn’t always effective, and the filmmaker loses control of the material the more contrived and overdeterm­ined the plot gets.

Despite the sometimes rickety scaffoldin­g they’re asked to inhabit, all of the actors deliver honest, grounded performanc­es. But the most compelling among them is Marthe Keller, who plays Elsa - the family’s patient, exquisitel­y tasteful wife and mother - with a radiance that illuminate­s the entire film. Wanda may be wonderful, but Keller’s Elsa is lit from within.

 ?? Aliocha Merker / Zodiac Pictures/Zeitgeist Films ?? From left, Jacob Matschenz, Birgit Minichmayr, Agnieszka Grochowska and Marthe Keller in “My Wonderful Wanda.”
Aliocha Merker / Zodiac Pictures/Zeitgeist Films From left, Jacob Matschenz, Birgit Minichmayr, Agnieszka Grochowska and Marthe Keller in “My Wonderful Wanda.”
 ?? Aliocha Merker / Zodiac Pictures/Zeitgeist Films ?? Agnieszka Grochowska in “My Wonderful Wanda.”
Aliocha Merker / Zodiac Pictures/Zeitgeist Films Agnieszka Grochowska in “My Wonderful Wanda.”

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