Greenock Telegraph

FILM OF THE WEEK ORIGIN

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(UK 12/ROI 12, 140 mins, Black Bear Internatio­nal, available on digital platforms, Drama/Romance) Starring: Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Jon Bernthal, Niecy Nash, Emily Yancy, Blair Underwood, Finn Wittrock, Victoria Pedretti, Myles Frost.

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Isabel Wilkerson (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor) tends to her elderly mother, Ruby (Emily Yancy), in between speaking engagement­s.

Isabel and financial analyst husband Brett Hamilton (Jon Bernthal) wrestle with their guilt as they ruefully oversee Ruby’s move into an assisted living facility.

Soon a er, newspaper editor Amari Selvan (Blair Underwood) encourages Isabel to listen to an emergency services call made by the self-appointed neighbourh­ood watch captain who fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin (Myles Frost) in Sanford, Florida.

The idea for a new book germinates but two devastatin­g personal losses within the space of a year almost break Isabel’s spirit.

Steadfast cousin Marion (Niecy Nash) provides emotional ballast so Isabel can return to work and undertake globe-trotting research for her nonfiction survey, Caste: The Origins of our Discontent­s.

Filmed on location in the American south, Berlin and Delhi, Origin is another masterful portrait of the multi-faceted human condition from writer-director Ava DuVernay.

An elegant, non-linear script de ly traces connective tissue between historical touchstone­s in Wilkerson’s bestseller, which explores how entire groups have been dehumanise­d throughout history.

DuVernay glides between these deeply moving stories of courage and defiance, which include a Nazi Party member (Finn Wittrock) and his Jewish lover (Victoria Pedretti) caught up in the gathering storm of 1937 Germany.

The writer-director’s personal engagement with Wilkerson is evident, confidentl­y shepherdin­g us through dense subject matter that could, in lesser hands, feel inaccessib­le or dry.

Tragedies of the past ripple through time and provoke animated discussion.

Filmmaking of the highest calibre.

Rating: ****

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