The Columbus Dispatch

Vanessa Kirby is dynamic and raw in ‘Pieces of a Woman’

- Lindsey Bahr

“Pieces of a Woman” begins with a tragedy. Martha (Vanessa Kirby) is expecting her first child with her partner Sean (Shia Labeouf). For a few minutes, we see them in the final stages of preparatio­n for life with a baby: She’s saying farewell to her co-workers and packing up her things; Her mother is signing the papers on a practical minivan; And they’re hanging the final photos up in the well-stocked and tastefully neutral nursery. h Then, suddenly, Martha is in labor and for almost 30 minutes the audience is given a front row seat to the most realistic and graphic depiction of a home birth ever put on film. It’s a difficult labor – Martha is almost drunk with pain – and it’s made even more stressful by the fact that their midwife is unavailabl­e and a replacemen­t is sent. Then it ends in death.

It is a brutal and harrowing start to a film that is committed to telling the ugly truth about a loss so devastatin­g that it's almost taboo. And it's just one of many deeply unpleasant occurrence­s to come. Like Martha and Sean, you are left somewhat paralyzed and drained after the events of the beginning and have no choice but to continue this emotionall­y wrenching and hauntingly visceral journey with them.

Martha attempts to go about her life but is constantly being reminded of what happened, whether it's seeing children out in the wild, running into her mother's friend at the grocery store or all the physical postpartum changes that one's body endures regardless of whether or not the child has survived. She's also navigating her own family's grief, arguments over burials and epitaphs and a legal battle against the substitute midwife (Molly Parker), which is thankfully relegated to the backdrop.

Kirby, the English actor who portrayed Princess Margaret in the first seasons of “The Crown,” plays Martha not as a wilting flower but as a kind of steely, determined robot alternatin­g between utterly detached and aggressive­ly angry. It is fiercely unguarded.

If the gutting discomfort feels more authentic than you're used to, it's be

cause the story is personal for the writer and director couple. Kata Wéber wrote the script based on her own experience losing a child with director Kornél Mundruczó during pregnancy. And “Pieces of a Woman” goes places that many films wouldn't dare. The first half hour will likely get most of the attention but

there are a few other jaw-dropping scenes of grief and anger that you must see to believe including a late film argument between Martha and her mother, who is played by Ellen Burstyn.

Aside from the revelatory moments, however, the film unravels a bit as it goes on. The focus turns too often to Sean, a constructi­on worker whose relationsh­ip with Martha, an educated profession­al from a wealthy family, never makes a lot of sense. His descent is a bundle of clichés and distracts from the uniqueness of Martha's story. He also has a moment of sexual aggression with Martha that is even made even more troublesom­e to watch in light of the recent allegation­s against Labeouf.

But it doesn't detract from Kirby's achievemen­t here. Hers is an unforgetta­bly vulnerable performanc­e that deserves attention and considerat­ion this awards season. The same also goes for Burstyn in a difficult supporting role that she commands.

This movie, streaming on Netflix Jan. 7, will not be for everyone, but it is important not least because it continues to advance the discourse around miscarriag­es which is a trauma that couples, but mainly women, have been expected to shoulder in secret for far too long. The ending won't be satisfying either, but that's probably the point. There is often no satisfying end to tragic loss, just survival.

 ??  ?? Shia Lebeouf, left, and Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
Shia Lebeouf, left, and Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
 ?? BENJAMIN LOEB PHOTOS/NETFLIX ?? Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
BENJAMIN LOEB PHOTOS/NETFLIX Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
 ?? BENJAMIN LOEB PHOTOS/NETFLIX ?? Ellen Burstyn in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
BENJAMIN LOEB PHOTOS/NETFLIX Ellen Burstyn in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
 ??  ?? Molly Parker, left, and Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”
Molly Parker, left, and Vanessa Kirby in a scene from the Netflix film “Pieces of a Woman.”

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