Calgary Herald

Judgment daze

Stellar acting deteriorat­es into melodrama

- TINA HASSANNIA

THE CHILDREN ACT

★★★ out of 5

Cast: Emma Thompson, Stanley Tucci, Ben Chaplin, Fionn Whitehead

Director: Richard Eyre

Duration: 1h45m Ian McEwan adapted his own novel with The Children Act, about a judge (Emma Thompson) who must decide whether or not a teenage boy should be allowed to refuse medical treatment due to his religious beliefs. This is one of the hardest cases Fiona Maye has ever had to rule on, as the life of Adam Henry (Fionn Whitehead) — whose family upbringing as a Jehovah’s Witness means he refuses a blood transfusio­n to cure a likely fatal infection — is entirely in her hands.

The conviction­s of Adam Henry’s lower-class religious family are expressed with the typical ineloquent, passionate fervour expected of such a case, and Fiona’s non-partisan, rational deliberati­on is depicted as a mark of her character; her cold, analytical mindset might be a boon for her career, but it’s a detriment for her marriage.

When husband Jack (Stanley Tucci), frustrated with the flagrant disregard she shows him and their relationsh­ip, announces he wants to undertake an affair for their marriage to survive, Fiona kicks him out of the house. It’s the kind of coolly principled action one might expect a highrankin­g authority of the law to enforce in her personal life, but Fiona’s swift kick of Jack’s suitcase as she throws him out reveals there is an emotional depth disguised beneath her otherwise calm and collected self.

Her emotional side emerges again at the hospital where she meets Adam Henry, as the two bond over a shared interest in William Butler Yeats and music. Fiona quietly concludes right then and there, and announces the following day in court, that it would be unfair to take any action that would prevent a young person from living, simply because of the unsophisti­cated indoctrina­tion forced on Adam by his parents.

Another film might have centred itself on this central moral dilemma that requires far more time or considerat­ion before a conclusion is met. Here, it’s used as a catalyst for a burgeoning relationsh­ip, one that defines a good half of the film, and, without spoiling anything, sinks into some interestin­g, heady quandaries. This prompts questions about what is an appropriat­e age difference in romance, how far gestures of unrequited love can reach before they infringe upon the rights of others, and the personal sacrifices made by women when pursuing demanding, male-dominated profession­s.

These questions are all interestin­g and the inclusion of Fiona’s overtly stuffy, ceremoniou­s assistant Nigel (Jason Watkins) offers a levity to a film that desperatel­y needs it.

But Fiona’s eventual epiphanies about the effects of her decision on Adam Henry are painted in primary colours here. The Children Act doesn’t delve as deeply into the thorny ethics of religious rights quite as richly as it could have.

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