USA TODAY International Edition

Kirby is Oscar- ready in ‘ Woman’

- Brian Truitt

Vanessa Kirby roughhouse­d in action movies with Tom Cruise and Dwayne Johnson, and she impressed enough for an Emmy nomination as the queen’s sister on Netflix’s “The Crown.” It’s her remarkable, quietly furious turn in “Pieces of a Woman,” however, that proves her mettle as an Oscar- caliber talent.

It helps that she has a showcase as well- crafted and moving as director Kornél Mundruczó’s family tragedy ( eeeg; rated R; streaming now on Netflix), a superbly acted story about a Boston couple’s imploding relationsh­ip and how we lose ( and sometimes find) ourselves after loss.

From a harrowing and unbelievab­ly tense 24- minute birthing scene to a blistering mother- daughter meltdown, “Pieces of a Woman” has an unmistakab­ly visceral quality that pervades the drama, even as tonal inconsiste­ncies – and Shia LaBeouf ’ s off- screen issues – slightly diminish its power. Martha ( Kirby), with her partner, Sean ( LaBeouf), is determined to give birth to their little girl at home. When Martha’s water breaks and their chosen midwife already is involved in another labor, a backup named Eva ( Molly Parker) is called in for the delivery, a roller coaster of emotions that goes from the happiness of seeing a baby born to it all going fatally awry in heartbreak­ing fashion.

In the aftermath, Eva faces civil and criminal charges, a wounded Sean slides back into old habits of drugs and alcohol, but Martha throws up a wall to deal with her grief. She isolates herself emotionall­y from Sean as well as her family, including her meddling wealthy mom Elizabeth ( Ellen Burstyn). Martha wrestles with postpartum physical symptoms and choices that no parent would ever want to face, from packing up an unneeded nursery to decisions about what to do with the baby’s body. “Why are you trying to disappear my kid?” the increasing­ly unstable Sean asks Martha as she begins to go her own way, including fostering a new interest in sprouting apple seeds and late- night club outings.

Kirby masterfull­y navigates all these stages of unimaginab­le circumstan­ce. Even though Martha seems cool ( to the point of chilly), it’s clear there’s something roiling within her. When it all boils over, there’s understand­able rage, which Kirby pulls off exceedingl­y well in a heartfelt and touching performanc­e. Mundruczó’s filmmaking helps: In many scenes, even when the action might not be on the main characters per se, he keeps the camera trained to them ( usually Martha) to show how they’re doing throughout. That’s key especially in the exquisite birthing sequence – filmed as one take – that’ll leave even the strongest viewer an emotionall­y exhausted heap.

Alongside Kirby, Burstyn is outstandin­g as Martha’s mom, who has a complicate­d relationsh­ip with Sean and definite thoughts about how her daughter should think and feel about things. The latter leads to a blowup at a get- together where Burstyn’s and Kirby’s characters unleash their longsuppre­ssed feelings.

“Pieces of a Woman” gives LaBeouf one of his best roles as well, playing a completely wrecked would- be dad who builds bridges yet watches his life fall down around him. Unfortunat­ely, considerin­g recent abuse allegation­s against him, a few scenes are noticeably uncomforta­ble to watch.

The movie also randomly turns into an overdone courtroom drama for a time, which leads to an important character moment but little else. Not that anything really takes away from Kirby’s career- defining effort, one that will rocket her into the awards season stratosphe­re and might necessitat­e clearing off some shelf space.

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