Los Angeles Times

Cox’s salty charm flavors sappy saga

- — Katie Walsh

Brian Cox brings his Scottish brogue to “The Etruscan Smile” as Rory MacNeil, a role that Cox seems born to play: a rough and wild man from the Scottish Hebrides who gets in touch with his softer side when he’s forced to rekindle a relationsh­ip with his estranged son in San Francisco.

Cox (HBO’s “Succession”) is the glue that holds together this maudlin film, directed by Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis and written by Michael McGowan, Michal Lali Kagan and Sarah Bellwood, based on Jose Luis Sampedro’s novel.

Rory’s salty attitude, fortified by daily nude dips in the Atlantic, is just the antidote to the uptight lifestyle his son Ian (JJ Feild) has adopted as a molecular gastronomi­st married to a wealthy Type A woman, Emily (Thora Birch).

A cancer diagnosis sends Rory to San Francisco to seek treatment, but what he finds there is a therapy you won’t get in a doctor’s office: true human connection.

While Rory romances a museum curator (Rosanna Arquette) and tries to impart his Gaelic wisdom to his infant grandson, his rocky relationsh­ip with Ian stumbles before they can reach some kind of catharsis and understand­ing, with little time to make things right.

Cox is a wonder to watch, and seeing him in this gentle, vulnerable role, spouting folk tales and seductions in ancient Gaelic, is a treat. If only the rest of this sappy story stood up to his talents.

“The Etruscan Smile.” In English and Gaelic with English subtitles. Rated: R, for some language. Running time: 1 hour 47 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena; Laemmle Town Center 5, Encino

 ?? Lightyear Entertainm­ent ?? THORA Birch, with baby, Brian Cox and JJ Feild explore family bonds in “The Etruscan Smile.”
Lightyear Entertainm­ent THORA Birch, with baby, Brian Cox and JJ Feild explore family bonds in “The Etruscan Smile.”

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