Toronto Star

Low-key love story takes its time to warm up

- MICHAEL PHILLIPS

The Photograph

(out of 4) Starring LaKeith Stanfield, Issa Rae and Rob Morgan. Directed by Stella Meghie. 106 minutes. Opens Friday at GTA cinemas. PG

The problem with movie trailers is: A) They’re necessary, apparently; B) Too many beans get spilled; and C) Often, a movie without much overt intrigue or plot machinery becomes packaged in a gently deceptive fashion.

This last problem brings us to a film worth seeing. Torontonia­n writer-director Stella Meghie’s “The Photograph” unfolds as a low-key romance starring Issa Rae of the YouTube series “Awkward Black Girl” and HBO’s “Insecure” and the very busy LaKeith Stanfield, lately improving everything from “Sorry to Bother You” to “Atlanta” to the recent “Knives Out.”

As with “The Notebook,” the title memory fragment here offers the narrative a peg on which to hang the story of two guarded individual­s learning to love again. Mae works as a curator at the Queens Museum. Her mother, a Louisiana native who moved north with young Mae to become a photograph­er, has recently passed, leaving behind two long, revealing letters tucked away in a safe-deposit box. These are addressed to Mae and to her father.

Over on narrative track number two, there’s feature writer Michael, a New Yorker like Mae, currently on assignment in Louisiana. His story subject, given a taciturn grace by the excellent Rob Morgan of “Mudbound” and “Stranger Things,” is an ex-oil rig worker turned crab fisherman. The walls of his humble home are filled with evocative photograph­s taken by Mae’s mother, Christina, the woman he once loved. One photo proves the exception: It’s of her, not by her, and the way she regards the camera suggests an untold chapter of a story.

Pursuing that story, Michael heads back to New York (he works for a fabulously prosperous media outlet called The Republic) and arranges a meeting with Mae, who’s putting together a retrospect­ive of her late mother’s work. From there, “The Photograph” plays an artful, subdued game of flashback hopscotch, back and forth from the present-day romance between Mae and Michael to 1980s scenes about Christina, Mae’s mother. She’s played by Chanté Adams from “Roxanne Roxanne,” and she’s subtly terrific.

Screenwrit­er-director Meghie takes some chances here, as words such as “subdued” and “quiet” indicate. There’s hardly any melodrama. A lot happens off-screen; we hear, for example, about Michael’s ex, who lives in Louisiana, but we never meet her. Back in New York, Mae and Michael get to know each other in leisurely, conversati­onal encounters, without the usual montage shortcuts.

As audiences we’ve become so accustomed to ridiculous, abrupt or plain stupid plot developmen­ts; here, it takes a while to realize that “The Photograph” won’t be indulging in any of that. In other words: When two characters get in a car and drive around, there won’t be any sudden car crashes that land anyone in the hospital. (Retroactiv­e spoiler alert.)

Mae can be a somewhat frustratin­g protagonis­t — on the page, she threatens to fade away in her own story — but Rae’s warmth keeps her interestin­g, just as Stanfield’s unpredicta­ble timing keeps his character (romantical­ly impulsive and tough to read) from being a weasel.

Meghie had the good sense to cast Lil Rel Howery as Michael’s brother; his improvs keep his co-actors on their toes, you can tell. “Hamilton” alum Jasmine Cephas Jones works in intuitive counterpoi­nt with Rae, as Mae’s museum cohort.

“The Photograph” treats all its characters with some decency and understand­ing, in a genre where straw villains and cardboard adversarie­s typically run rampant.

The plaintive, jazz-inflected musical score by Robert Glasper establishe­s the right vibe and level of drama, which is to say: more like life and less like the movies.

 ?? SABRINA LANTOS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lil Rel Howery, cast as Michael’s brother uses his improv skills to keep his co-actors, such as Teyonah Parris, on their toes.
SABRINA LANTOS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lil Rel Howery, cast as Michael’s brother uses his improv skills to keep his co-actors, such as Teyonah Parris, on their toes.
 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The romance between LaKeith Stanfield and Issa Rae in “The Photograph” unfolds at a pleasing and realistic pace.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The romance between LaKeith Stanfield and Issa Rae in “The Photograph” unfolds at a pleasing and realistic pace.

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