Waterloo Region Record

THE SEAGULL FILM ADAPTATION SOARS

- KATIE WALSH

When Anton Chekhov’s debut play “The Seagull” debuted on the stage in 1896, its revolution­ary naturalism rattled audiences and critics. It was considered a disaster until Konstantin Stanislavs­ky directed and performed a version of it two years later, and Chekhov’s work endures to this day. With the help of playwright and screenwrit­er Stephen Karam, director Michael Mayer has brought a new cinematic adaptation to the screen, imbuing the tale of complicate­d family dynamics, creation and heartbreak with an unpreceden­ted sense of intimacy.

In the countrysid­e outside of Moscow, a family gathers at a sprawling wooded estate. Ailing Sorin (Brian Dennehy) summons his sister, storied actress Irina (Annette Bening), to his bedside. She arrives with her lover, the much younger writer Boris (Corey Stoll). With Sorin seemingly on the up and up, Irina settles in for a summer in the country. Her emotionall­y tortured son Konstantin (Billy Howle), desperatel­y jealous of Boris’ success, tries in vain to court his mother’s attention, pounding away at the piano and staging elaborate DIY plays in the forest starring his crush, their neighbour, Nina (Saorise Ronan).

The foursome becomes hopelessly entangled in a knot of jealousy, affection and betrayal, as Boris and Nina are drawn to each other. The vain, needy and manipulati­ve Irina vies for Boris’ attention with dresses and flirtation and flat-out domination, while Kostantin acts out in increasing­ly violent ways. He shoots a seagull and lies at Nina’s feet, declaring he is the seagull.

Orbiting around these four is a group of extended family members and friends who heighten and disperse the drama. Masha (Elisabeth Moss) is the hilariousl­y goth daughter of the farm managers, who pines after Konstantin while rebuffing the attention of schoolteac­her Medvenko (Michael Zegen). Everyone wants something that they’re not getting: inspiratio­n, success, fame, love, adoration.

Working with cinematogr­apher Matthew J. Lloyd, Meyer infuses the tale with a sense of tactile immediacy. The film is lit almost entirely with practical lighting _ fires and candles and sunlight dancing on skin. An ever-present hand-held camera wavers and swoons into close-ups of each actor. There are almost no wide establishi­ng shots, so we’re up close and personal with each character. The proximity is at times overwhelmi­ng, transferri­ng the strong emotions on display to the audience. In a scene where Boris rows Nina around the lake, he looks directly into the camera, breaking the fourth wall, moving back and forth as he rows. The sheer intimacy is enough to make anyone fall for him, or at least get a sense of Nina’s experience as she’s swept away.

The film doubles back and repeats itself, toying with our sense of time. It’s a keen device to establish what changes and what remains the same. What’s constant is the space — its rituals and the dynamics within it. What changes are the people. The matters of the heart that seemed so light and trivial have devastatin­g consequenc­es. Boris, seemingly so thoughtful, is a man of very little conviction, and that lack of a spine reverberat­es tragically.

For his take on “The Seagull” Mayer has assembled a spectacula­r cast and maintains the historical roots, but most importantl­y, he’s paid tribute to Chekhov’s landmark sense of naturalism, which was a great evolution for the theatre. It seems like it captures the true sense of humanism at the very soul of the story, which reflects both the lightness and the true darkness of life.

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 ?? NICOLE RIVELLI SONY PICTURES ?? Annette Bening as Irina in “The Seagull.”
NICOLE RIVELLI SONY PICTURES Annette Bening as Irina in “The Seagull.”

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