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‘ Father’ is a haunting look at dementia

- Brian Truitt Columnist

What would it feel like to not recognize your own daughter? Or find your home oddly becoming a place of strange discomfort? While movies often tackle the effects of dementia or Alzheimer’s on patients and their families, director Florian Zeller’s drama “The Father” reaches new heights by putting its audience up close and very personal with the confusion and palpable terror of losing one’s memory.

With exceptiona­l filmmaking and Anthony Hopkins’ best performanc­e since “Nixon,” “The Father” ( eeee; rated PG- 13; in New York and Los Angeles Friday, expanding nationwide March 12, on video on demand March 26) is an immersive character study of an elderly man struggling to rationaliz­e his existence as he loses his grip on the people and things around him. But it also is a moving exploratio­n of how children become caretakers for their parents, with Olivia Colman turning in a standout role as a daughter weighing the hard decision about whether to live her own life or give it up for her dad.

Zeller weaves in elements of psychologi­cal horror and even a mystery component to put his main character ( and us) on edge constantly, and while the drama goes to some disturbing places ( including incidents of elder abuse), at its core it is very much about love and the power of empathy.

Played by Hopkins, Anthony ( yep, that's the on- screen elder gentleman's name, too) is an 80- year- old Londoner living in a posh apartment. He listens to classical music, has a favorite watch that doubles as a security blanket of sorts, yet can’t fend for himself anymore due to his ailing mental health. He also has a tendency to roll through caregivers, having threatened his last one, and Anthony’s daughter Anne ( Colman) wants him to meet a new nurse because she’s soon moving to Paris with a new love. “You’re abandoning me. What is going to become of me?” a visibly freaked- out Anthony says.

Soon after she leaves, he’s in the kitchen, hears a door slam and confronts a stranger ( Mark Gatiss) sitting and reading a newspaper. This man Paul says he’s Anne’s husband, though this is news to Anthony. The old man suspects that Anne’s “cooking something” against him and wants to move him into a home, and his daughter comes through the door but it’s another woman ( Olivia Williams) that he doesn’t recognize.

“The Father” just gets more unnerving from there as Anthony tries to make sense of it all while the film gradually reveals the cracks in his constantly shifting reality, and his personalit­y veers wildly from moment to moment. When Anthony meets his new caregiver Laura ( Imogen Poots), whom he thinks resembles his younger daughter Lucy, he flirts and does a little soft shoe yet on a dime turns on

her and cruelly mentions that she shares Lucy’s “habit of laughing inanely.”

Hopkins is astounding when navigating all these various states of mind – from righteous anger to withering spitefulne­ss to a child- like vulnerabil­ity – that play out as Anthony loses control of his life. Even though the part isn’t convention­ally showy, Hopkins gets to touch every bit of the emotional spectrum and the result is as indelible a role as when Hopkins donned Hannibal’s mask and won an Oscar for “The Silence of the Lambs.”

Colman, a couple of years removed from taking best actress for “The Favourite,” also is understate­dly superb as a woman dealing with all of this. And it all takes a toll: Paul ( sometimes Gatiss, sometimes Rufus Sewell) resents Anthony’s presence and pushes Anne to do something about him, Anne has to smooth things over when Anthony insults his nurse, and most achingly, her father doesn’t even know who she is half the time.

Sneakily using production design and uncanny good editing, “The Father” fascinatin­gly puts the viewer in the same state of distress as its main character. And in adapting his own play, the director’s carried over an intimate quality of a staged chamber drama to not just show a man dealing with dementia but also offer a way into his mind with a haunting, deeply affecting and quite memorable narrative.

 ?? PROVIDED BY SEAN GLEASON ?? Anthony Hopkins stars as a man with dementia in Florian Zeller’s “The Father.”
PROVIDED BY SEAN GLEASON Anthony Hopkins stars as a man with dementia in Florian Zeller’s “The Father.”
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 ?? PROVIDED BY SEAN GLEASON ?? The mental decline of Anthony ( Anthony Hopkins) affects his daughter Anne ( Olivia Colman) in “The Father.”
PROVIDED BY SEAN GLEASON The mental decline of Anthony ( Anthony Hopkins) affects his daughter Anne ( Olivia Colman) in “The Father.”

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