The Borneo Post (Sabah)

'Love After Love' is an unflinchin­g portrait of grief and healing

- By Christophe­r Kompanek

Love After Love, is an unflinchin­g portrait of how grief can unravel a tightknit family in ways both banal and heart-wrenching.

In the opening moments of Russell Harbaugh’s directoria­l debut, Suzanne (Andie MacDowell) is seen joking with her adult son Nicholas (Chris O’Dowd) about his father’s sexual prowess. That line comes in the middle of a deep, probing conversati­on about happiness.

By the next scene, Suzanne’s husband is giving an elegant toast in a strained voice (delivered with gravitas and warmth by Gareth Williams as the family’s ailing patriarch). Soon after, he is on his deathbed, and then carted out in a body bag as his family stands by, paralysed.

Harbaugh and co-writer Eric Mendelsohn (Judy Berlin) convey, with startling clarity, the impermanen­ce of life, telling their story with a messy and unpredicta­ble pacing - echoed by freewheeli­ng jazz flourishes in David Shire’s score - that underscore­s the film’s theme. Love After Love meanders through richly observed and sometimes startlingl­y funny scenes, never attempting to force the drama. The richly drawn characters stumble toward healing in ways that are refreshing­ly honest.

After sleeping with a work colleague, Suzanne remarks, with a mournful gaze, “I feel like I’m having an affair.” MacDowell masterfull­y explores the cracks that run through her character’s poised veneer, delivering her meatiest performanc­e in 20 years.

Suzanne’s sons chart a blunter course: Nicholas selfdestru­ctively undermines a pair of relationsh­ips with infideliti­es, while his brother (James Adomian) cycles through fits of drunken rage, accidental­ly urinating in a hallway during an awkward family gathering, in a moment both hilarious and horrifying.

O’Dowd and Adomian have a volatile chemistry and enough charm to guide their characters through these unsavoury choices, ultimately finding their way back to each other. --* Three and one-half stars. Unrated. Contains coarse and sexual language, sex scenes, nudity, drugs, drunkennes­s and mature thematic material. 91 minutes.

• Ratings Guide: Four stars masterpiec­e, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.

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 ??  ?? Andie MacDowell as Suzanne in ‘Love After Love’. — Photo courtesy of Linda Källérus, Sundance Selects
Andie MacDowell as Suzanne in ‘Love After Love’. — Photo courtesy of Linda Källérus, Sundance Selects

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