The Denver Post

“Pieces of a Woman” a raw, ragged study of loss

- By Jeannette Catsoulis

There are two remarkable scenes in “Pieces of a Woman,” though the first — an almost 30-minute, largely unbroken opening shot of a home birth — seems set to divert critical attention from the second.

That scene, arriving about halfway through the movie, feels at least as radical and courageous as its precedent. In it, we see the central couple, Martha and Sean ( Vanessa Kirby and Shia Labeouf), try to have sex. Both are grieving the death of their child; but while Martha has turned inward, Sean is reaching out with visible aggression.

The tussle teeters on the verge of force; what deflects that impression is our knowledge of the couple’s closeness and Kirby’s intense performanc­e. Using chiefly body language, she conveys Martha’s desperate need to match her husband’s desire, to feel something other than emptiness. It would be regrettabl­e if the current allegation­s of abuse against Labeouf were to distract from her skill.

“Pieces of a Woman” comes close to wringing you out. The English-language debut of Hungarian director Kornel Mundruczo (best known for his jaw-dropping 2015 drama, “White God”), the movie doesn’t always gel: The couple’s pursuit of legal action against their seemingly blameless midwife (Molly Parker) feels at odds with the movie’s dense emotionali­sm. Yet when everything clicks, the screenplay (by the director’s wife, Kata Weber, drawing on memories of a similar experience) lucidly shows how an unimaginab­le loss can spark a cascade of atrophy.

As Sean, a constructi­on worker in longtime recovery, Labeouf lends a touching loneliness to a character who, driven by his wife’s withdrawal, seeks connection and sensation elsewhere. Difference­s of class and upbringing rear into view, invigorate­d by Martha’s wealthy mother (Ellen Burstyn), a steel-spined Holocaust survivor. Family quarrels buzz around decisions that, in the wake of a devastatin­g bereavemen­t, mean nothing and everything: The dispositio­n of the infant’s remains, the spelling of her chosen name.

Other voices, though, are just white noise to Martha, who takes to the chilly Boston streets, alone save for Benjamin Loeb’s gliding, compassion­ate camera. In a grocery store, she inhales the scent of an apple, later wrapping its tiny seeds in damp cotton and laying them tenderly in the refrigerat­or. It’s a while before we learn why; yet Kirby makes us feel Martha’s agony so keenly that details scarcely matter. The film’s focus on the physical is so relentless that it becomes the narrative.

Set over eight harrowing months, “Pieces of a Woman” is a ragged, mesmerizin­g study of rupture and reconstruc­tion. The ending is ill-judged, but the movie understand­s that while we love in common, we grieve alone.

 ?? BENJAMIN LOEB — NETFLIX VIA AP ?? Vanessa Kirby, who portrays a woman grappling with the loss of her first child during a homebirth, in a scene from “Pieces of a Woman.”
BENJAMIN LOEB — NETFLIX VIA AP Vanessa Kirby, who portrays a woman grappling with the loss of her first child during a homebirth, in a scene from “Pieces of a Woman.”

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