West Lothian Courier

Drama displays disintegra­ting career

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Cate Blanchett has long been one of the finest actresses of her generation.

But even considerin­g her eyeopening back catalogue (Nightmare Alley, Carol, Blue Jasmine), Tar might just feature her best work yet.

The Australian plays world-renowned composer-conductor Lydia Tár who is forced to ponder a difficult future as sexual misconduct allegation­s surface.

Remarkably this is writer-director Todd Field’s first flick since 2006’s Little Children and the reason it works so well is its leading lady.

In less sure hands, a two-hour 38-minutes long, dialogue-heavy drama would have tested your patience way before the final note is played.

However, Blanchett is so good that you could probably watch her discussing her favourite song for that length of time.

Appearing in virtually every scene, the 53-year-old is a true force of nature – and genuine enigma. Without veering too much into her background, you can tell Lydia has stepped on a few toes to achieve greatness.

Beguiling and enigmatic, you’re never fully behind or against Blanchett and the deteriorat­ion in her mental state is expertly conveyed, culminatin­g in a memorable final scene that contrasts wonderfull­y with the opening on-stage interview.

Noémie Merlant (Francesca), Nina Hoss (Sharon) and Sophie Kauer (Olga) gift Tar with a collection of some of the strongest female performanc­es in recent times, while Mark Strong (Eliot) and Alec Baldwin (whose voice is featured) are in blink-and-you’ll-miss-them territory.

Field’s script doesn’t spell everything out for you, which may frustrate some viewers looking for absolute closure on all of the plot strands.

It’s a mature tale that demands your attention and the director manages to turn conducting, performanc­e art and picking the right note into thrilling, tense moments in the spirit of Whiplash and Black Swan.

The running time is a test, but stick with the terrific Tar and Blanchett’s bombastic piece of work.

●Are you a fan of Cate Blanchett as an actress? If so, what films do you enjoy her in the most?

Pop me an email at ian.bunting@ reachplc.com and I will pass on your comments – and any movie or TV show recommenda­tions you have – to your fellow readers.

The words“Terry Gilliam”and “strange material”often merge together but even by the Brit director’s previous quirky standards, The Zero Theorem is a real head-scratcher.

Set somewhere in the 21st century, Gilliam presents a future that is equally ridiculous, horrific and striking.

The bizarre plot follows Christoph Waltz’s mathematic­ian, who attempts to solve the near-impossible Zero Theorem for employer Management (Matt Damon). Waltz, David Thewlis and Melanie Thierry stand out from the carnival-ride aesthetics.

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