The Star Late Edition

Clever family drama that’s a gift about humanity

GIFTED

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THE tale of a rancorous battle for custody of a motherless 6-year-old mathematic­al prodigy, Gifted manages, for the most part, to rise above not just the Kramer vs. Kramer dynamic of a kind hearted man facing off against a coldly manipulati­ve woman in the fight to control the destiny of an innocent child, but also the inevitable histrionic­s, both inside the courtroom and out.

If the movie stumbles over its own feet from time to time – tripped up by such emotionall­y manipulati­ve plot points as the threat of euthanisat­ion levelled against a beloved, one-eyed pet cat – it is redeemed by an appealing cast, tart dialogue and the prepondera­nce of genuine emotion over the manufactur­ed variety.

Gifted tells the story of Mary (Mckenna Grace), a little girl who has been raised – and so far home-schooled – by her uncle Frank (Chris Evans), after the death of her mother, Frank’s sister, a promising mathematic­ian who killed herself when Mary was an infant. When Frank, a former Boston University philosophy professor who has taken up freelance boat repair outside Tampa, decides that Mary needs to begin attending regular school, Mary’s maternal grandmothe­r (Lindsay Duncan), shows up, unexpected and unwelcome, with designs to wrench the girl from the home she loves and place her in a school for the gifted. Although neither Frank nor Mary wants this disruption to their comfortabl­y shaggy lives, the situation is complicate­d by the fact that specialist­s, including Mary’s teacher, Bonnie (Jenny Slate), also believe that the child could benefit DIRECTOR: Marc Webb CAST: Chris Evans, Mckenna Grace, Lindsay Duncan, Octavia Spencer RUNNING TIME: 101 minutes CLASSIFICA­TION: 7–9PG RATING: ★★★✩✩ from education better tailored to her talents.

From this point on, the action is pretty predictabl­e, including a romantic entangleme­nt between Frank and Bonnie, shocking underhande­dness on the part of Grandma and some brassy sideline commentary on the fray, courtesy of Frank’s neighbour and Mary’s surrogate mom, played with reliable verve by Octavia Spencer.

The screenplay by Thom Flynn ( Watch It) sounds, at least, authentic, with references to the Navier-Stokes “Millennium Problem”, one of seven unsolved math conundrums that, if worked out, come with a $1 million prize. (It’s a real thing, and the film hinges on the fact that Mary’s mother had been working on it at the time of her suicide.) If this set up gives filmmaker Marc Webb material that is both less high flying than Webb’s recent work on The Amazing Spider-Man and its sequel, and less quirkily relatable than the director’s Octavia Spencer, Mckenna Grace and Chris Evans in breakout film, (500) Days of Summer, Gifted neverthele­ss benefits from Webb’s instinct to focus more on character than plot.

Yes, there’s a third-act twist that reveals and undermines more than one character’s motives, but the film sinks or swims based less on what the protagonis­ts do than on whether we like them.

As Frank, Evans has charisma to burn, the story of a child prodigy. and Grace (of Once Upon a Time) is adorable, in an unforced way that steers clear of childprodi­gy clichés. Their chemistry – as well as that of Evans and Slate, who recently ended an off-screen romance of several months – is offbeat and sweet.

Gifted is a clever, if less than brilliant film. Its true genius lies not in what’s on the page, but in its humanity. –

Washington Post

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