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Horror flick is no teddy bears picnic

Damon Smith reviews the latest new releases to watch in the cinema

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ORIGIN (12A)

IN writer-director Ava DuVernay’s beguiling biographic­al drama, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Isabel Wilkerson (Aunjanue EllisTaylo­r) delivers an empowering talk about her nonfiction book, Caste:

The Origins Of Our Discontent­s.

“You don’t escape trauma by ignoring it,” she professes. “You escape trauma by confrontin­g it.”

Her words resonate deeply, delivered a matter of months after the murder of George Floyd and before Donald Trump alleges the 2020 US presidenti­al election was stolen from him. We are the unconteste­d winners with DuVernay’s picture.

An elegant, non-linear script deftly 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 early 20th-century social reformer Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar (Gaurav J Pathania), who openly challenges the idea that Dalits are the untouchabl­e outcasts of Indian society; African-American anthropolo­gists (Isha Blaaker, Jasmine Cephas Jones), who infiltrate the Mississipp­i Delta to study the subservien­ce of black people to the whites; and a Nazi Party member (Finn Wittrock) and his Jewish lover (Victoria Pedretti) caught up in the gathering storm of 1937 Germany.

Tragedies of the past ripple through time to the fatal 2012 shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin (Myles Frost) in Sanford, Florida, by a self-appointed neighbourh­ood watch captain.

Ellis-Taylor delivers an emotionall­y raw performanc­e as Wilkerson, who begins the film tending 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 after, newspaper editor Amari Selvan (Blair Underwood) encourages Isabel to listen to an emergency services call made by the man who fatally shot Trayvon Martin.

“You can’t be walking around on a white street at night and not expect trouble,” Ruby comments on the case. 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 eventually return to work and undertake globe-trotting research for her book

Filmed on location in the American South, Berlin and

Delhi, Origin is another masterful portrait of the multi-faceted human condition from DuVernay.

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.

“There’s more to life than what we can see,” Isabel sermonises as a soulmate lingers in death’s embrace.

Through DuVernay’s lens, we see filmmaking of the highest calibre that expands minds, profoundly moves and sparks animated discussion.

IMAGINARY (15)

8.5/10

Moving back to your childhood home could be considered a blessing, or a curse, for some. In the case of Jessica (DeWanda Wise), an author and illustrato­r of children’s books, what seems like a fresh start becomes truly the stuff of nightmares.

All is well until her youngest stepdaught­er Alice (Pyper Braun) finds a stuffed bear called Chauncey in the basement of the house, which at first all seems innocent enough.

But within days Alice’s demeanour changes and she’s relaying conversati­ons she’s having with her “imaginary friend”, aka Chauncey.

From there, terror-filled nightmares for Jessica continue while the others in the house husband Max (Tom Payne) and another stepdaught­er Taylor (Taegen Burns) - also start experienci­ng strange things. There are some great moments of scare and highoctane, anxiety-inducing scenes as Chauncey becomes a terrifying and otherworld­ly force.

The real powerhouse to be reckoned with is Wise, who is an inspired casting choice to lead the film.

The American actress, 29, who was equally impressive leading

Spike Lee’s 2017 Netflix series

She’s Gotta Have It, manages to keep the audience guessing while her character deals with layers of complexity and tension in a sometimes-lagging script.

The glimpses back to Jessica’s childhood, especially her relationsh­ip with her father, are useful pieces of a fragmented puzzle and you almost wish they had been expanded on a bit more.

The tension present in Jessica’s role as a new stepmother is thoughtful­ly articulate­d, and the addition of the children’s biological mother, who struggles with mental illness, is well done.

The film does make you think about imaginary friends and the importance they often play in early childhood developmen­t, and it really calls into question the limits of human imaginatio­n.

It is a watchable, if slightly forgettabl­e, film that has some decent tension.

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 ?? ?? Left: Origin, with Niecy Nash as Marion Wilkerson and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor as Isabel Wilkerson; Pyper Braun as Alice in Imaginary
Left: Origin, with Niecy Nash as Marion Wilkerson and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor as Isabel Wilkerson; Pyper Braun as Alice in Imaginary

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