The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MOVIE REVIEW ‘Come Away’ is a smart, stylish mash-up of beloved fairy tales

- By Ann Hornaday

Imagine a mash-up of J.M. Barrie and Lewis Carroll, with a dash of Charles Dickens for Victorian miserablis­m and an all-star cast including Angelina Jolie, David Oyelowo and Michael Caine, and you get the sense of “Come Away,” a fitfully engaging reworking of “Peter Pan” and “Alice in Wonderland.”

Here, screenwrit­er Marissa Kate Goodhill imagines that Peter and Alice are siblings, growing up in the idyllic country home of Rose and Jack Littleton ( Jolie and Oyelowo), loving parents who rear Peter, Alice and their older brother, David, to be creative free spirits. The Littleton household is one of near-constant wonderment, as Alice (Keira Chansa) holds tea parties for her beloved stuffed rabbit, her hand mirror usually at the ready, and as Peter and David ( Jordan A. Nash, Reece Yates) stage imaginary raids on an abandoned boat they discover in a nearby river.

Rabbits, tea parties and fanciful pirate ships are just a few of the myriad callbacks that populate “Come Away,” especially after a family tragedy sends Alice and Peter further into their dream worlds. Here, Goodhill posits that those journeys aren’t born of childlike innocence as much as grief and abandonmen­t. The uses of enchantmen­t, by her lights, have much more to do with real-world pain than escapist adventure.

It’s a smart conceit, and in the hands of director Brenda Chapman (“Brave”), it’s executed with discerning taste and a rich visual palette. Echoing such recent films as “The Personal History of David Copperfiel­d” and “Enola Holmes,” “Come Away” takes place in a bracingly pluralisti­c 19th-century England, giving the story added verve and resonance. (In addition to Caine and Derek Jacobi, who appear in too-brief cameos, the film is graced by a terrific performanc­e by Clarke Peters as an extravagan­tly hatted character from Jack Littleton’s enigmatic past).

If the thematic material in “Come Away” can be difficult and draggy at times — the film addresses mortality, addiction and family dysfunctio­n, among other anxieties — Chapman enlivens it with the handsome colors and textures of the era, from the floral William Morris patterns on the Littleton walls to the extravagan­t velvets and laces worn by Rose and her prim sister Eleanor (Anna Chancellor, at her most gloriously imperious).

There are moments when the fan-fiction speculatio­ns of “Come Away” feel too forced and downright cockamamie; the plot, probably inevitable, becomes schematic and the near-constant state of magical thinking too sticky-sweet for words. But the enterprise is ennobled by Chapman’s sense of style and a consistent­ly strong set of performanc­es, especially from Jolie and Oyelowo, the latter of whom is one of the film’s producers.

“Come Away” may not hold a candle to the stories it references, but it shines with an illuminati­ng and aspiration­al light all its own.

 ?? HILARY B. GAYLE/SMPSP/MAGINOT LINE/RELATIVITY MEDIA ?? Angelina Jolie and David Oyelowo star in “Come Away,” and Oyelowo is one of the film’s producers. It’s a fitfully engaging reworking of “Peter Pan” and “Alice in Wonderland.”
HILARY B. GAYLE/SMPSP/MAGINOT LINE/RELATIVITY MEDIA Angelina Jolie and David Oyelowo star in “Come Away,” and Oyelowo is one of the film’s producers. It’s a fitfully engaging reworking of “Peter Pan” and “Alice in Wonderland.”

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