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Showing posts with label Lesley Manville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lesley Manville. Show all posts

Friday, February 20, 2026

MOVIE REVIEW: MIDWINTER BREAK

 






















Longtime retired couple Stella and Gerry realize that their relationship has reached a crossroads while on holiday in Amsterdam. After so much time and so many memories, long-held promises and deeply concealed wounds threaten to come to light and force them to confront their future.

Director: Polly Findlay

Cast: Lesley Manville, Ciarán Hinds, Julie Lamberton, Ed Sayer

Release Date: February 20, 2026

Genre: 

Drama

Rated PG-13 for thematic material involving alcoholism, some strong language, bloody images and suggestive material.

Runtime: 1h 30m

Review:

Midwinter Break is a quiet, deconstruction of a marriage that’s tender but devesting at the same time carried by a pair of stalwart performances from Lesley Manville and Ciarán Hinds.  Polly Findlay’s directorial debut leans heavily on her background in the theater by staging scenes in very deliberate and intimate manner which gives her two central performers plenty of room to display their immense talent.  It’s a meditative approach that works well for the delicate character study at play as she makes great use of the gloomy, European setting.  This is definitely not the kind of film that’s in a rush to get anywhere fast as it puts the spotlight squarely on the performances.  Lesley Manville and Ciarán Hinds are more than up to the task as they provide so much depth and texture without saying a word.  They are both able to convey such a massive amount of emotional information with simple looks that you just have to appreciate their talent.  They bring a level of lived in authenticity to the character’s love but deep seeded resentment that’s built over decades after a tragic moment that led them on divergent emotional journeys.   Hinds gives his character a pragmatism that he uses to cope along with a fair amount of alcohol while Manville exudes a quiet desperation as she searches for something meaningful in her life.  Their diametrically opposed world views are firmly entrenched and while she struggles to find a new path there’s nary doubt that when it’s all said and done, they would never leave each other making Midwinter Break a tragic tale of a compromised love. 

A-

Sunday, November 8, 2020

MOVIE REVIEW: LET HIM GO

 

Following the loss of their son, a retired sheriff and his wife leave their Montana ranch to rescue their young grandson from the clutches of a dangerous family living off the grid in the Dakotas.

Director: Thomas Bezucha

Cast: Kevin Costner, Diane Lane, Lesley Manville, Will Brittain, Jeffrey Donovan, Kayli Carter, Booboo Stewart

Release Date: November 6, 2020

Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller

Rated R for violence

Runtime: 1 h 54 min

Review:

Let Him Go is meditative western that’s really heavily on it’s cast since it’s story and plot are decidedly light.  Thomas Bezucha slow burn of a film is an interesting mix of idolized nostalgia and crime drama.  Bezucha takes his time letting us get to know the main couple before moving the film’s plot forward in earnest.  Kevin Costner & Diane Lane make for a believable and good looking pair of grandparents.  They both add far more subtle and nuance to their characters than what’s in the actual script.  Through their talents they give us a relationship that feel real and lived in, making it the cornerstone of the entire film.  Lesley Manville’s villainous Blanche is a much showier role and she’s excellent in limited screen time.  The film would have been wise to give us a tad more depth or history to her character and the Weboy clan as a whole.  As is, they’re thinly drawn evil ciphers whose sole purpose is to terrorize the protagonist.  The lack of depth wouldn’t be such an issue if you couldn’t spot story threads in the early part of the film that are presented and ultimately abandoned.  Ultimately, the performances alone make this a rewarding watch even with its pedestrian pacing and thin characters. 

B-

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