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QuickView: The Outrun (2024)

The Outrun

“I miss it. I miss how good it made me feel.”

Rona

The Outrun is a layered depiction of alcohol rehabilitation, adapted from Scottish journalist Amy Liptrot’s memoir, with a focus on resilience rather than trite lessons. Elevating The Outrun are writer-director Nora Fingscheidt’s cinematic choices and Saoirse Ronan’s captivatingly raw central performance. Opening with the myth of the selkie is an apt metaphor for the restless Rona who has returned from London to her family farm on the Orkney Islands. Although Rona’s alcohol dependency is signposted at the outset, she is already in recovery in the film’s present day and Fingscheidt uses overlapping storytelling gradually to reveal Rona’s past as a graduate student in London. A third layer is Rona’s mind, showing her current focus which might include new information she is absorbing or ruminations about her childhood. In the first half, these feel chaotic but they become more grounded as time progresses. Rona’s bi-polar father seems to serve as a constant reminder of what she could become (“if you go mad in Orkney, they just fly you out”) while her mother offers religious support that Rona cannot accept. The colour and momentum of London sequences are contrasted with the desaturated, cloudy light of the islands — often Saoirse’s eyes are the most vibrant thing on screen. This use of colour appears to reflect Rona’s connection with life, warmer tones only arriving late in the film. The sound design also deserves a mention, from the ever-present wind rising and falling to the unorthodox juxtaposition of island nature with dance music through Rona’s headphones, perhaps a vain attempt artificially to inject old energy into her new life. There is no shortage of films which tackle alcoholism and many offer greater drama through devastating tragedy or feel-good catharsis; instead The Outrun blends the elements of its film-making into a very personal experience of recovery, trusting that Rona’s resilience alone will prove edifying.

9/10

QuickView: Men (2022)

“What is it that you want from me?”

Harper

Alex Garland’s latest film crafts impeccably tense atmosphere in an isolated English village, with its unusually verdant palette of bold greens and blacks distinguishing it visually from the horror pack. Jessie Buckley plays Harper, a woman escaping to the countryside after a personal tragedy, but finds herself being harassed by a stranger. Whilst it begins with the unease of being alone in an unknown place, particularly as a woman, as the title suggests Garland uses this to examine the female experience of being subjected to various demands of men: to stay with them, to entertain them, to take advice from them or to fear them. Men’s subject matter is primed for a post #MeToo world, though its metaphor becomes rather blunt by the end, like a priest who overtly blames Harper for his own thoughts. Rory Kinnear is astounding in a role that requires considerable range, whilst Jessie Buckley’s performance captures the caged need to scream as a release, a parallel to Anya Taylor-Joy’s role in The Menu depicting female anger precipitating in an outburst rather than the common depiction of subdued silence. Men succeeds more on atmosphere than depth, and its grotesque conclusion may not be to all tastes, but it is frequently thrilling nonetheless.

7/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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