The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Fact-based abortion-rights drama ‘Call Jane' doesn't quite ring true

- By Thomas Floyd

“Call Jane” Rated: R for some coarse language and brief drug use. Running time: 121 minutes. (out of four)

Topicality is baked into the film “Call Jane,” director Phyllis Nagy's historical drama about a pre-Roe v. Wade network of undergroun­d abortion providers in late-1960s Chicago. But for this undercooke­d endeavor, such relevance is more of a burden than a boon.

The real-life inspiratio­n for this fictionali­zed tale the Jane Collective, a women-run network that provided 11,000 abortions when the procedure was mostly illegal — is a genuine source of female empowermen­t. Still, Nagy only occasional­ly imbues the proceeding­s with urgency befitting the life-or-death stakes. Best known as the screenwrit­er behind 2015's “Carol,” a master class in romantic longing and slowburn storytelli­ng, the filmmaker (working from a slapdash screenplay by Hayley Schore and Roshan Sethi) strains to shepherd a narrative that zips along in a haze of underserve­d storylines.

That can't be blamed on star Elizabeth Banks, who portrays a housewife named Joy with a criminalli­tigator husband (Chris Messina), a pubescent daughter (Grace Edwards) and a life-threatenin­g pregnancy. After seeing her appeal for a “therapeuti­c terminatio­n” rejected by the hospital — a pointedly blunt scene, in which the members of the all-male panel discuss the woman before them as if she's invisible — an incredulou­s Joy turns to the Jane Collective for a covert procedure.

That experience sparks a feminist awakening in Joy,

who soon gets roped into joining the “Janes” as a volunteer. Banks sells the transforma­tion from tightly wound housewife to secret women's rights advocate, though the actress is at her best when Joy is amusingly squirming in discomfort during her early days with the Janes — even if the script promptly sweeps that initial consternat­ion under

the rug.

Sigourney Weaver plays the collective's tough-love founder with palpable pluck and world-weariness. Wunmi Mosaku does a lot with a little with her character, an impassione­d activist pushing for the group to better serve Black women. Cory Michael Smith is sufficient­ly sleazy as the Jane Collective doctor who is only in it for the money — and may not, in fact, be a physician at all. (His coldly methodical oversight of Joy's abortion makes for a striking, if difficult, scene.) But Messina can't quite get a grip on the patriarchy­pushing Will, whose marital devotion cracks when Joy becomes too busy with her clandestin­e activism to put dinner on the table. And Kate Mara is woefully underused as the pill-popping widow next door who cozies up to Will amid Joy's increasing­ly frequent absences.

Although the deception predictabl­y comes to a head, as Joy's husband and daughter act on their suspicions that something is awry, “Call Jane” tidies that mess with baffling brevity. The same goes for the conflict over the Jane Collective's approach to race, which is broached and resolved so swiftly that the entire subplot reads like a last-minute rewrite. A debate in which the Janes futilely attempt to assign a limited number of free abortions — tragically weighing patients' hardships against one another — only scratches the surface of that deeper dilemma.

The result is a film that's engaging enough, but choppily paced and oddly inert. Beyond an audacious opening shot and some periodappr­opriate needle drops — Nancy Sinatra, Malvina Reynolds and Vanity Fare among them — “Call Jane” is also decidedly unstylish. After the movie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January, several months before the Supreme Court overturned 1973's Roe v. Wade, the parallels between the Jane Collective's battle to protect women's rights and current activists' newfound fight to restore them are even starker now — making it all the more dishearten­ing that “Call Jane” doesn't quite ring true.

 ?? Wilson Webb / Roadside Attraction­s ?? Elizabeth Banks in “Call Jane.”
Wilson Webb / Roadside Attraction­s Elizabeth Banks in “Call Jane.”

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