Paisley Daily Express

A sail through rocky waters

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Williams hasn’t always been one of my favourite actresses, but the 36-year-old is terrific here; much closer to her quality work in Brokeback Mountain and My Week with Marilyn.

Randi is a spitfire of a woman who gives as good as she gets in her back-and-forth verbal tête-à-têtes with Lee and the pair say more with their eyes, sighs and slumped shoulders than many other stars could with pages of dialogue.

Lonergan utilises flashbacks to patiently fill in the dots of Lee’s past and help the viewer understand why he’s so reluctant to be back in his home town.

Jody Lee Lipes’ (Martha Marcy May Marlene, Trainwreck) desaturate­d cinematogr­aphy impressive­ly encapsulat­es a small fishing town with familiar faces protective of their surroundin­gs.

The writer-director thankfully drip feeds warmth and humour into the often hard-going drama, not least during an unexpected quirky hospital family congregati­on in aid of Lee’s older brother Joe (a likeable Kyle Chandler) after he’s diagnosed with a terminal heart condition.

But for chunks of the film’s two-hours-plus length, Lonergan asks a lot of his audience by shooting scenes of little consequenc­e – and there’s no getting away from the gloomy central storyline.

Wisely, though, he chooses to end things with a ray of hope as Lee’s journey comes full circle.

Overall, Manchester by the Sea sails through one or two rocky waters to take you on a beautifull­y-acted, moving journey.

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