Los Angeles Times

A plunge into tragedy

One family’s journey to rise above trauma hits close to home for ‘Waves’ writer-director Trey Edward Shults and his two young stars

- BY GARY GOLDSTEIN

Nearly 40 years after the release of “Ordinary People,” which remains one of American film’s most moving, wrenching and resonant family dramas, comes writer-director Trey Edward Shults’ “Waves,” another acclaimed, affecting portrait of familial trauma that bears more than a passing resemblanc­e, in all the best ways, to the winner of 1980’s top Oscar.

“Waves” involves a successful Florida family — dad Ronald (Sterling K. Brown), mom Catherine (Renée Elise Goldsberry) and their teenage kids: volatile wrestling champ Tyler (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and the younger, quieter Emily (Taylor Russell) — whose seemingly well-ordered existence explodes in an unexpected and devastatin­g way. Lucas Hedges costars as Emily’s kindly new boyfriend, Luke.

Although “Waves” may be more audiovisua­lly kinetic, racially diverse and uniquely structured than “Ordinary People,” it powerfully evokes that film’s deep-rooted parent-child tensions, coming-of-age hurdles, crisis-laced dynamics and a complex web of love, guilt, pain and redemption.

Recently, over quiche, protein drinks and wellness juice shots at a West Hollywood hotel, Shults (“Krisha,” “It Comes at Night,”), 31, and stars Harrison (“Mudbound,” “Luce”) and Russell (“Escape Room”), both 25, spoke with thoughtful enthusiasm about their personal connection­s to the family in “Waves.”

Trey, your films are all about family in one way or another. Can you talk about the conception of “Waves” and how its family story evolved?

Aspects of it had been brewing in me forever, starting with music and images, and not really knowing what it was. And then it kind of became Tyler’s story. But by the time I met Kel [Harrison, when he acted in “It Comes at Night”] it became about a brother and a sister linked by a tragedy, and their family and lovers.

It’s deeply, deeply personal, drawing on things loved ones and I have lived. But the story grew bigger than me as I started talking things out with Kel: our past experience­s, how we were at Tyler’s age, relationsh­ips with our families. Then [that process] continued with the other actors.

Kel, I read that when you were a teen you and your dad had similar sorts of conflicts as Tyler has with his father.

My dad [jazz artist Kelvin Harrison Sr.] is an insanely good musician, so he really wanted me to be the best jazz pianist and trumpet player that I could be. But the practice and performing [proved so rigorous] … that I finally told him, “This is not fun anymore. It’s not a hobby, it’s not setting me up for anything. It’s making me resent you as a person and it’s making me resent this craft.” I wanted to do music, just not that music.

Trauma sticks in your brain in a way that you just filter everything and choose people through that lens. — TAYLOR RUSSELL, Emily in ‘Waves’

Did you draw on that during the film’s competitiv­e fatherson scenes? I’m thinking specifical­ly about those intense arm-wrestling and weighttrai­ning sequences.

I did. I would practice saxophone with my dad sometimes. I remember always wanting to keep up with him, but he’s so talented that to even try to process that was just, “I don’t get it — on an intellectu­al level or on an artistic level. I’m just not there and I don’t know if I’ll ever get there.”

Also, my dynamic with Sterling had its own … thing because I looked at him in kind of the same way I looked at my dad. I was just so enamored by his presence that things took on this competitiv­e nature: me trying to appease him, make him feel like I was worth his time, that I was valued in a certain way. The relationsh­ips all kind of meshed together.

Taylor, why do you think Emily reacts to the world around her so differentl­y than her brother?

Emily could be really angry at her parents for not paying enough attention to her, for being so hyper-focused on Tyler. But I think that her capacity for forgivenes­s is immense. She has this ability to really see her parents for who they are, to be easy on them and to forgive them.

In my personal life, I was an Emily type: I kind of fell into the background too, just based on the needs of my brothers. In hindsight, it did make me a different kind of person and more independen­t, which I think it also makes Emily.

Trey, let’s talk about the fishing scene with Emily and her dad where they finally communicat­e about Tyler. It’s one of the best moments in the film. What was the inspiratio­n?

I had a relationsh­ip with my stepdad that in some ways was like Tyler and his dad’s, with a lot of pent-up resentment. One day, when I was 25 or 26, he just opened up and was vulnerable in a way that I’d never seen before. There was no parent-child judging, just two people purely trying to understand each other.

It broke barriers and created a whole new relationsh­ip between us after he raised me for over 20 years. It just makes your parent that much more human when they’re that vulnerable with you.

Taylor, how much do you think both your and Luke’s difficult family situations bring you together?

I think these two people mirror each other in what they need, and that’s definitely something that bonds them. Trauma sticks in your brain in a way that you just filter everything and choose people through that lens.

There’s also this gorgeous lightness that Luke brings into Emily’s life that allows her to be a teenager again, and she gives him this beautiful gift of healing. There’s a lot that they give each other that’s very buoyant and not dysfunctio­nal at all. And it’s really beautiful to see how they kind of flourish together through all this pain.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? “WAVES” costars Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Taylor Russell f lank writer-director Trey Edward Shults, who says the film’s story is a personal one.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times “WAVES” costars Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Taylor Russell f lank writer-director Trey Edward Shults, who says the film’s story is a personal one.
 ?? A24 ?? ‘WAVES’ stars Kelvin Harrison Jr., from left, Taylor Russell, Sterling K. Brown and Renée Elise Goldsberry as a Florida family that must piece itself back together after tragedy strikes.
A24 ‘WAVES’ stars Kelvin Harrison Jr., from left, Taylor Russell, Sterling K. Brown and Renée Elise Goldsberry as a Florida family that must piece itself back together after tragedy strikes.

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