Los Angeles Times

19-year-old makes bold first feature

- — Robert Abele

What you’re struck by as 19-year-old New Orleans filmmaker Phillip Youmans’ arresting first feature “Burning Cane” unfolds is how much he believes in film as a sensory dialogue between real and psychologi­cal spaces — the weaving car of a drunk preacher in mourning (Wendell Pierce), the lonely kitchen of a deeply religious woman (Karen Kaia Livers) estranged from her violent, alcoholic son (Dominique McClellan), and that same out-of-work son’s disturbing approach to looking after his own young boy (Braelyn Kelly) when they’re home alone.

In the closely observed yet loosely stitched together fragments, there’s a wisdom about cinema’s soul-searching capabiliti­es one expects from a hard-bitten oldtimer, not someone shooting their debut in high school.

Youmans’ poetic wade into rural black Louisiana, and the private realms of the faithful and faltering across three generation­s, is the kind of boldly off-road and unapologet­ically arty family drama that makes one sit up and take notice. Even when the images edge toward the self-consciousl­y authorial — Youmans is also the cinematogr­apher — there’s always something to latch onto: an authentici­ty of theme (sickness and treatment), a point of view (especially the boy’s), a curious sound cue or a visual touch (his sense of silhouetti­ng and shadow is exquisite) that speaks to somebody wanting us alert to everything a medium has to offer. “Burning Cane” gets us excited about what else Youmans can do.

“Burning Cane.” Not rated Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes Playing: Array Amanda Theater; also on Netflix

 ?? Array ?? KAREN Kaia Livers and Wendell Pierce star in the poetic “Burning Cane,” set in rural Louisiana.
Array KAREN Kaia Livers and Wendell Pierce star in the poetic “Burning Cane,” set in rural Louisiana.

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