Los Angeles Times

Hunter is solid in choppy narrative

- — Noel Murray

Holly Hunter gives one of the best performanc­es of her career in writer-director Katherine Dieckmann’s indie drama “Strange Weather,” playing a Southerner reckoning with her son Walker’s suicide.

Watching an actress of Hunter’s caliber in a meaty leading role partly compensate­s for the creaky plot and overearnes­t tone.

Hunter stars as Darcy Baylor, an administra­tive assistant at a small university. With her job in danger and her personal relationsh­ips stagnating, Darcy hits the road with her best friend Byrd (played by the excellent Carrie Coon).

Dieckmann tries too hard to force a character sketch into a dramatic shape by giving Darcy’s quest a preset endpoint: the Louisiana office of Walker’s old classmate, who stole his lucrative franchise restaurant idea. The harder “Strange Weather” drives toward a payoff, the more it sputters.

But Dieckmann excels at capturing the textures and diversity of her location, showing the South as a varied region where agricultur­e, academia, poverty and progressiv­ism sit side by side.

Plus, the filmmaker is savvy enough just to let Hunter work. This performanc­e is built from dozens of tiny, human gestures — from the way Darcy looks defiant and stung whenever she’s criticized, to the way she pets her dog with her bare feet. Darcy’s story may feel contrived, but her character is vividly real.

 ?? Langdon Clay Brainstorm Media ?? HOLLY HUNTER, with Kim Coates, gives a strong performanc­e as a Southern mom who goes on a quest.
Langdon Clay Brainstorm Media HOLLY HUNTER, with Kim Coates, gives a strong performanc­e as a Southern mom who goes on a quest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States