Los Angeles Times

‘Frank the Bastard’ and other films.

- — Martin Tsai

A complex, engrossing mystery that holds up in repeated viewings, “Frank the Bastard” premiered in 2013 under the less unfortunat­e title “East of Acadia.” Revolving around a dark chapter in a quaint New England town’s history, like writer-director Brad Coley’s previous effort, “The Undeserved,” the new film has similarly suffered the fate of a longoverdu­e release.

Transplant­ed New Yorker Clair (Rachel Miner) returns to Maine, prodded and accompanie­d by her bestie, Isolda (Shamika Cotton), who discovers that the commune where Clair spent her early childhood is in foreclosur­e and on the auction block. When Clair was 6, she and her father abruptly left after her mother’s untimely death. The towns folk still remember her, even though she has little recollecti­on. But her Aunt Alice (Wendy Vanden Heuvel) is less than thrilled to see her.

Clair gradually uncovers the uneasy tensions between idealist hippies and provincial harpies, environmen­talism and capitalism, activism and corruption, theory and practicali­ty, blood and water, etc.

Despite the film’s madefor-TV aesthetic and performanc­es, Coley has saturated its back story with vividly drawn details that make this convoluted saga wholly believable. He went to the trouble of filming expository scenes that others might have excised for budgetary considerat­ions, such as Clair’s divorce proceeding­s and grainy home movies of hippies at the commune. These flourishes help flesh out the intricate characteri­zations that might otherwise have been just passing references in the dialogue. “Frank the Bastard.” No MPAA rating. Running time: 1 hour, 52 minutes. Playing: At Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood. Also on video on demand.

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