Baltimore Sun

Warmth thrives in otherwise bleak world starring Hanks

- By Katie Walsh

The “Grumpy Old Men” era seems to come for all of our lovable movie stars, including Tom Hanks, who easily slides into this new phase with “A Man Called Otto,” a remake of the Oscar-nominated Swedish film “A Man Called Ove.” It’s not easy to translate the famously dry, bleak Scandinavi­an humor to a sunnier, more optimistic American worldview, but writer David Magee and director Marc Forster maintain the melancholy of the original, which is based on the book by Fredrik Backman.

Set in the suburbs of Pittsburgh, “A Man Called Otto” is a story about the loss of human connection in a modernized and rapidly changing world, and the effort it takes to knit a community through the ties that bind. It is also a story about the transforma­tive nature of grief, and the beauty and cruelty of life lived in moments both mundane and monumental.

If these lessons are obvious and somewhat maudlin, well, yes, they are, but that doesn’t make them any less effective. Forster’s sweet spot seems to lie at the juncture of the sentimenta­l and the strange, using unique concepts as a way to explore existentia­l themes, not shying away from the harsher aspects of humanity, always finding a bright side. The trailers for the film don’t give away the true nature of the story, focusing more on the comedic elements without revealing any of the tragedy behind Otto’s cantankero­usness, but trust that it is there.

Otto is isolated, forced into retirement and living alone in his small community.

Without someone to live for, Otto’s minor annoyances have become his raison d’etre, righting wrongs like irregularl­y sorted recycling and incorrectl­y displayed parking permits. It’s his grumpiness that keeps him clinging to this mortal plane, and it’s his cheerfully chaotic neighbors who offer the friction to keep his gears grinding.

Forster assembles an ensemble to surround Hanks, and the standout is Mexican actor Mariana Trevino, who plays Marisol, a harried, determined, heavily pregnant mom of two who moves in across the street with her husband, Tommy (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo). Marisol doesn’t back down from Otto, and calls him out on his rudeness, and the hapless young parents bring over food and guilelessl­y request favors from their new neighbor, forcing him out of his comfort zone with their own naturally exuberant expectatio­ns of community.

Forster and cinematogr­apher Matthias Koenigswie­ser bring a Scandinavi­an-inspired coldness to the look and feel of “A Man Called Otto,” the color palette desaturate­d, the compositio­ns

angular. But the bleakness of this world does not require much contrivanc­e to feel familiar — this community is crumbling thanks to corporate capitalist rot and digital disconnect.

Despite this despair, there is an irrepressi­ble warmth, too, that creeps through this dramedy because this is a Hanks family affair. Hanks’ wife, Rita Wilson, is a producer with her husband, and a couple of her folk songs crop up throughout, while Wilson and Hanks’ son Truman Hanks, a spitting image of his father, plays young Otto in flashbacks.

While this sometimes results in tonal inconsiste­ncy, tilting toward the treacly, the cumulative effect of the story’s twists and turns is powerful, if somewhat predictabl­e. Trevino’s effervesce­nt performanc­e as Marisol keeps the story on track, both actor and character proving to be the saving grace for this curmudgeon­ly fellow, and film.

MPA rating: PG-13 (for mature thematic material involving suicide attempts, and language)

Running time: 2:06

How to watch: In theaters Jan. 13

 ?? COLUMBIA PICTURES ?? Mariana Trevino and Tom Hanks star in “A Man Called Otto,” a remake of a Swedish film.
COLUMBIA PICTURES Mariana Trevino and Tom Hanks star in “A Man Called Otto,” a remake of a Swedish film.

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