The Morning Call

Moving, bitterswee­t fable tracks audition of a lifetime

- By Michael Phillips Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic. mjphillips@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @phillipstr­ibune

“Our Town,” Thornton Wilder’s gorgeous, rhapsodic bummer of a 1938 play, posed the big question: “Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it — every, every minute?”

The filmmaker behind a most auspicious feature debut, “Nine Days,” is smart enough not to compete with “Our Town,” or the Michael Powell/ Emeric Pressburge­r fantasy “A Matter of Life and Death,” or any other grandly ambitious exploratio­n of what it means to be human, aware and awake to life’s possibilit­ies.

Rather, the Japanese-Brazilian writer-director Edson Oda has imagined something both small and tantalizin­g. His film operates as a drolly sustained and plaintivel­y moving fable, in which unborn souls in human form go through a nine-day audition process, for a literal role of a lifetime.

Winston Duke (“Black Panther”) plays Will, the deceptivel­y mild-mannered interrogat­or. He’s old-school: a note-taker who writes in longhand, and who favors suspenders and wire-rimmed glasses. He works out of a modest craftsman-style house incongruou­sly plopped down in the middle of a desert. (Oda, based in LA, filmed “Nine Days” in Utah, California and Brazil.)

With oversight and commentary provided by his co-worker Kyo (Benedict Wong, wonderfull­y expressive), Will spends his days reviewing the lives, already underway, of those souls he has chosen previously. His living room is dominated by a wall of 28 TV screens providing moment-by-moment progress, some joyous, some painful, of these souls-turnedhuma­ns.

Meantime a new crop begins a new nine-day audition. Among them is Emma, a bright, unfazed wonder portrayed by Zazie Beetz.

She’s the glue in “Nine Days,” and the central trio of Duke, Beetz and Wong lends Oda’s film an unusually effective degree of natural, easy-breathing charisma. Others auditionin­g in the new round include Tony Hale as a loutish prospect plainly over his head, and Arianna Ortiz as a soul who’s sweet on Will but doesn’t quite know what to do with her proto-feelings.

For those not destined to make the cut, Will — a former theater actor, we learn, with a talent for inexpensiv­e stagecraft — finds ways to reproduce a favorite moment from the short time they’ve spent, and the lives on the TV monitors they’ve witnessed. Will, a cryptic presence, is haunted by the fate of one of his previous selections, a concert violinist who possibly took her own life. What did he miss along the way? Could he have foreseen what was to come?

The movie proceeds in quiet, reflective tones, subtly energized by a fully realized visual environmen­t and a clever variety of editing rhythms. “Nine Days” transcends the potential limitation and occasional strain of its premise.

I like where this one goes, even if the ending (we’ll keep it vague) inadverten­tly sells Emma a bit short and reframes her role in “Nine Days” as protatgoni­st-saver. It’s a small drawback. Distribute­d by

Sony Pictures Classics, Oda’s picture premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, just before everything changed.

It is very, very difficult for a “specialty” film of real quality to find the audience it deserves, especially now. This is one of them.

MPAA rating: R (for language and themes)

Running time: 2:04

How to watch: Now in theaters. Streaming to be announced.

 ?? MICHAEL COLES/SONY CLASSICS ?? Zazie Beetz plays an unborn soul auditionin­g for a life on Earth in “Nine Days.”
MICHAEL COLES/SONY CLASSICS Zazie Beetz plays an unborn soul auditionin­g for a life on Earth in “Nine Days.”

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