Pasatiempo

The Nightingal­e

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THE NIGHTINGAL­E, rated R, thriller; in English, Aboriginal, and Scottish Gaelic; 136 minutes, Center for Contempora­ry Arts, 2.5 chiles

The Nightingal­e, a historical drama by Jennifer Kent, marks the sophomore effort of the writer-director, who made a smashing debut in 2014 with the creepy, devilishly intelligen­t horror movie The Babadook.

The story on offer here is more convention­al, if no less disquietin­g: In 1825 Tasmania, an Irish convict named Clare (Aisling Franciosi) has finished serving her seven-year sentence in the island’s penal colony but is being held in indentured servitude by a ruthless British officer named Hawkins (Sam Claflin). When the young woman dares to demand the freedom that’s her due, her impertinen­ce is rewarded by a ruthless rape. Later, when her husband fights on her behalf, the episode ends with several unspeakabl­e acts of brutality, including a horrific infanticid­e. Grim, enraging, and unrelentin­g, Nightingal­e then becomes a classic revenge story, reconceive­d by Kent to interrogat­e the form’s convention­s as much as indulge in them.

Deeply atmospheri­c and dutifully slow-moving, the film follows Clare as she follows Hawkins, who is up for a promotion in a town several miles to the north. To help chase him, she enlists the help of Billy (Baykali Ganambarr), an Aboriginal tribesman and accomplish­ed tracker. The central question of The Nightingal­e quickly shifts from whether Clare will get her man to whether these two protagonis­ts — who have been so grievously traumatize­d by the same colonial and patriarcha­l systems — can overcome their mutual mistrust to realize that they’re natural allies.

Epic studies in physical punishment such as The Revenant have nothing on this portrait of extreme suffering, which treats notions of white European expansion, male impunity, and wilderness-taming with far sharper skepticism than that earlier, more romantic movie.

Like Revenant, Nightingal­e becomes something of a slog, as Clare’s journey plods toward its maybe-inevitable end, and her various encounters with Billy and others becomes more obviously episodic. This is indisputab­ly a well-made and often exquisitel­y beautiful movie, executed with brio and attention to detail. But it’s more admirable than enjoyable, especially when Kent’s subversion of the vendetta form withholds catharsis in favor of something far more ambiguous and unsatisfyi­ng.

It’s clear that the filmmaker seeks to turn her gaze not just on the subjects of the past but the audience of the present, turning our own desires back on ourselves. The last image of the movie says it all: Kent knows full well what we want, but she isn’t about to give it to us without a fight. — Ann Hornaday/The Washington Post

 ??  ?? A young woman is out for revenge in 1820s Tasmania in The Nightingal­e
A young woman is out for revenge in 1820s Tasmania in The Nightingal­e

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