The Guardian (USA)

The 50 best films of 2020 in the US: No 9 – Never Rarely Sometimes Always

- Adrian Horton

Never Rarely Sometimes Always, writer-director Eliza Hittman’s reticent, watchful film on two 17year-old girls’ journey across state lines for an abortion, is about as opposite in tone to the incendiary, patronisin­g anti-abortion movement in the US as one can get: understate­d, devastatin­gly spare, resonantly attuned to the unsaid, be it pain or the friendship tested by a healthcare system that leaves so many seeking reproducti­ve care on their own.

There are numerous ways to go about depicting the obstacle course that is abortion access in the US – HBO Max’s Unpregnant, released this year, routes the same premise into a mostly charming road-trip buddy comedy – but this is one of the most quietly powerful films of the year in its utter lack of pretension. The Sundance breakout allows the girls’ navigation of the hurdles – legal, financial, logistical, emotional – to compound into a searing portrait of reproducti­ve healthcare in the US that lingers like a yellowing bruise.

So much goes unspoken – you don’t hear Autumn (an impressive­ly inward Sidney Flanigan) tell her cousin and best friend Skylar ( Talia Ryder) that she is pregnant. Their decision to secretly schlep to New York from their small

Pennsylvan­ia town, where state law prohibits abortion for minors without parental permission, is swift, mostly tacit. Nor is there a word on the volatile political environmen­t and legislativ­e assault on abortion access that presaged the film’s release: 12 states enacted a form of abortion ban in 2019, some barring the procedure from as early as six weeks, before many, including Autumn, know they’re pregnant; Alabama attempted to ban abortion outright.

Hittman observes this thicket through the eyes of one lost in it: the dismaying search for answers through Google, the condescens­ion and confusion sowed by the town’s “crisis pregnancy centre”, an increasing­ly common facility that purports to counsel women on reproducti­ve healthcare but in practice advises against “abortion-mindedness”. In New York, the obstacles become more diffuse and surprising – the girls navigate Port Authority, lug suitcases through a subway turnstile, hit up a skeevy yet approachab­le stranger from the bus for money. Hittman’s vigilant, passive style turns the city into an amorphous, shadowy challenge; midtown is far from unknown to moviegoers, but, under her direction, it becomes unfamiliar and suspect, the girls’ safety a bristling open question.

Never Rarely Sometimes Always, which takes its title from the answers on a patient intake form read aloud to Autumn by a Planned Parenthood receptioni­st in a scene that drew raves at Sundance, is almost too spare in its observance of the girls’ bond and journey. But it’s ambitiousl­y unsettling – I realised in the final scene that I’d kept my jaw clenched the entire movie. Since its release, the reproducti­ve healthcare environmen­t in the US has grown only more hostile with the appointmen­t of Amy Coney Barrett, a longtime favourite of the anti-abortion movement, to the supreme court. The court’s strengthen­ed conservati­ve majority will be a generation­al fight; this film carves out an aching, vivid space in its long shadow, by paying sustained attention to a journey more American women will likely have to take, if they’re able.

Since its release, the reproducti­ve healthcare environmen­t in the US has grown only more hostile

 ??  ?? Sidney Flanigan in Never Rarely Sometimes Always, a film in which so much goes unspoken. Photograph: Courtesy of Focus Features/AP
Sidney Flanigan in Never Rarely Sometimes Always, a film in which so much goes unspoken. Photograph: Courtesy of Focus Features/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States