Empire (UK)

A Beautiful DAY in the neighborho­od

- Ian FREER

★★★★ OUT 31 january CERT Pg / 109 mins

DIRECTOR Marielle Heller

cast Matthew Rhys, Tom Hanks, Chris Cooper, Susan Kelechi Watson

PLOT 1998. Tough-nosed magazine profile writer Lloyd Vogel (Rhys) is sent to interview beloved children’s TV presenter Fred Rogers (Hanks). Yet as their meetings progress, the genial Rogers turns the tables on Vogel and starts gently interrogat­ing the dark areas in the journo’s life, chiefly his estranged relationsh­ip with his dad (Cooper).

There’s something potentiall­y too on the nose about casting Tom hanks as mister rogers. hollywood’s nicest man playing the iconic children’s TV host who schooled a nation in kindness, decency and humanity seemingly writes itself. only in marielle heller’s hands, it isn’t. Based on Tom Junod’s 1998 Esquire cover story in which the journalist set out to write a character assassinat­ion on rogers and ended up with invaluable life lessons, heller’s third feature pays tribute to rogers’ homespun goodness but finds original, less obvious notes through deft delicacy, winning weirdness and zero sentimenta­lity.

With her previous film, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, heller was adept at finding chinks of light in a dark, misanthrop­ic writer, and so she proves again here. Junod surrogate lloyd Vogel (rhys) is an award-winning journalist renowned for giving his subjects a rough ride. To the chagrin of his smart, supportive wife (Watson) he has an angry, dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip with his dad Jerry (Cooper), to the extent that lloyd punches him out at a family wedding. When Esquire is putting together a feature on american heroes, the only interviewe­e who will grant him an audience is children’s television presenter Fred rogers (hanks). What follows is an ode to the power of gentle conversati­on as rogers defuses Vogel’s abrasive questions and begins an interview of his own, getting the writer to open up and slowly, believably heal.

The story arc — open-hearted optimist wins over the dishearten­ed cynic — is obvious and potentiall­y trite, but heller, writers noah harpster and micah Fitzerman-blue and cast find the dimensions in both parties, especially rogers: a telling moment sees him on his own in a TV studio softly playing piano until hammering down on the keys, an expression of inchoate anger. Keying into the handcrafte­d quality of her debut, The Diary Of A Teenage Girl, heller brings mister rogers’ worldview to life, creating establishi­ng shots out of train-set architectu­re, spinning a michel gondry-esque dream sequence in which a miniature Vogel (with rabbit ears) befriends rogers’ puppets, and framing the whole film as an episode of rogers’ show. That these flights of fancy sit within both the tête-à-têtes and Vogel reconnecti­ng with his damaged past is testament to heller’s skill with tone.

she is helped by two terrific performanc­es. rhys, with a burning-eyed intensity, perfectly renders a man who can’t quite make a leap to forgivenes­s; hanks, all bushy eyebrows and comfy cardies, nails not only the warmth but also rogers’ underlying intelligen­ce — rogers’ philosophi­es are more than just Facebook slogans; it’s a wisdom under-pinned by hardearned realities and hanks sells it beautifull­y. The film’s standout scene sees rogers invite Vogel to share a minute’s silence, a chance “to remember all the people who loved you into being”. moving and true, it’s heller’s exquisite film in a nutshell.

VERDICT

It could easily be twee twaddle, but A Beautiful Day In The Neighborho­od is a nuanced, formally playful delight, a perfectly pitched and played ode to goodness. all hail marielle heller.

 ??  ?? There was nothing that thrilled Tom more than a booking to be Asda’s Santa.
There was nothing that thrilled Tom more than a booking to be Asda’s Santa.

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