Hindustan Times (Delhi)

A compelling tale of then and now

- Madhusree Ghosh

Direction: Peter Farrelly Actors: Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini Rating:

Based on a true story, Green Book follows the Jamaican classical pianist Don Shirly and his driver, an Italian former New York bouncer named Tony ‘Lip’ Vallelonga, on a journey into the Ameri- can Deep South in the 1960s.

The casting alone is a coup. Viggo Mortensen brings energy and nuance to the role of the brash, raw Tony. Mahershala Ali’s Shirly is restrained and regal in his vulnerabil­ity — a person of colour descending into the heart of racist America ferried there by a Caucasian driver. The chemistry of contrasts is palpable from their first scene.

The title refers to The Negro Motorist Green Book, written by Victor Hugo Green in 1936, as a guide for AfricanAme­rican road-trippers. Which restaurant­s you were allowed into, which hotels you could use, which towns had a curfew for people of colour after sundown.

Aside from the all-pervasiven­ess of the prejudice, the film tracks the casual cruelty it entailed, and yet manages to not be grim. Part of this is a result of some artful writing; brash humour mix with poignancy to make you laugh out loud and immediatel­y want to reverse the reaction.

Special mention must be made of Linda Cardellini, playing Tony’s wife Dolores. The letters exchanged between the couple give the film a romantic rose tint that is enjoyable without being saccharine sweet.

The only downside of the film is the predictabl­e happy ending.

Overall, though, a great watch that feels timely and, sadly, relevant.

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