The News-Times

‘The Water Man’ is a rare treat: A sensitive family film grounded in real life

- By Ann Hornaday

“The Water Man” Rated: PG for mature thematic elements, scary images, peril and some strong language. Running Time: 92 minutes. ★★★ (out of four)

In “The Water Man,” an assured, richly appointed directoria­l debut by David Oyelowo, the filmmaker nods toward his aesthetic roots when his main character briefly opens his “E.T.” lunchbox.

That flash of retro pop culture feels right at home in this sensitive family drama, in which Lonnie Chavis plays Gunner Boone, a serious-minded only child who has just moved with his parents, Amos (Oyelowo) and Mary (Rosario Dawson), to fictional Pine Mills, Ore.

Gunner is happier sketching his graphic novel — about a detective investigat­ing his own murder — than tossing the football Amos eagerly brings into his room, only to be rebuffed; the two have a strained relationsh­ip, especially compared with the intuitive closeness Gunner shares with his mom. But that relationsh­ip has its own challenges, many of which hover around its edges, as Mary fights a terminal illness while trying to keep its ravages and fatal implicatio­ns a secret from her son.

Such are the somber underpinni­ngs of “The Water Man,” which centers on Gunner’s search for the title character, a local legend said to possess powers of immortalit­y. With the help of a coolly self-possessed older girl named Jo (Amiah Miller), Gunner sets forth on a frightenin­g life-or-death quest that will put the two in increasing danger as they plunge deeper into the mysterious forest bordering their town.

Based on a script by Emma Needell, “The Water Man” wears its inspiratio­ns proudly, from that Spielbergi­an lunchbox to frequent references to Sherlock Holmes. Oyelowo does a superb job of balancing the story’s most somber elements with preteen adventure and moments of mordant humor: In a quiet moment with Mary, Gunner asks if she knows where people go when they die. “That one’s easy,” she replies. “Cheesecake Factory.”

Still, the overarchin­g tone of “The Water Man” is one of impending grief, real-world anxieties that Oyelowo doesn’t shy away from, and that he and his fellow castmates lean into with just a light enough touch to keep things from getting maudlin. (Supporting players include Maria Bello as the local sheriff and Alfred Molina as an eccentric funeral director.) Chavis, best known from his work on the television show “This Is Us,” brings admirable focus to his role as a young man who’s both wiser than his years and utterly unprepared for the most devastatin­g losses of adulthood; he and Miller have an easy and convincing chemistry as temperamen­tal opposites who nonetheles­s develop a bond borne of shared pain.

Filmed with an eye for rich production values and spectacula­r natural vistas, “The Water Man” is that rare family film that isn’t a nonstop CGI stunt or lowest-denominato­r exercise in cheap laughs. Rather, it’s grounded in recognizab­le, if admittedly unwelcome, realities of real life, even when it indulges in occasional flights of fancy (the pencil-drawing animations that bring Gunner’s work to life are particular­ly arresting). Oyelowo brings a thoughtful sensibilit­y and thoroughgo­ing good taste to the kind of movie Hollywood doesn’t produce anymore but shouldn’t be so quick to discard. There are as many absorbing, affecting family films to be made as there are families to enjoy them.

 ?? Karen Ballard / RLJE films/ShivHans Pictures ?? Lonnie Chavis and Amiah Miller in “The Water Man.”
Karen Ballard / RLJE films/ShivHans Pictures Lonnie Chavis and Amiah Miller in “The Water Man.”

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