MANCHESTER
BY THE SEA
Several years ago an entertainment
reporter from a newspaper (in Texas I think), called me up to ask about recent
trends in film. I inferred that he
wanted me to say something about explosions, rocket blasts, car chases,
superheroes, computer generated images, and all the other gimmickry that so
many people mistake for movie making. Instead, I told
him that American pictures now and then showed signs of waking up to the
heritage of literary works like Winesburg,
Ohio, examining something of the
dreariness, loneliness, and emptiness of small towns and small lives, the drab
underside of American life that seldom appears in the glossiness of Hollywood
cinema. (Of course, that conclusion
ignores all those flicks about young people straying into some little Southern
town inhabited by inbred cannibals eager for new, preferably college educated
nourishment). Surprisingly, he seemed uninterested
after that.
Perhaps beginning back with The Last Picture Show, the industry
occasionally turns away from the sentimental vision of works like It’s a Wonderful Life, one of my
personal nonfavorites, and explores something darker and sadder in movies like All the Real Girls, The Good Girl, Beautiful
Girls, Monster’s Ball, Sling Blade, even About Schmidt, which if it strays from the small town, retains some
of the great American vision of disillusion and disappointment out there in
flyover country. In the midst of the
holiday season, when the multiplexes explode in fireworks and sophisticated
technology positively leaps from the screen, a rather modest, low-key film inspired
garlands of superlatives and generous sprinklings of exclamation points, and
has already won some of those bogus prizes that the industry employs to praise
itself. The movie, Manchester by the Sea, tells a very simple story that reflects an
understanding of the sad poetry of ordinary life, the impossible situations we
often occupy, the problems we struggle and often fail to solve.
It uses a series of flashbacks to explain something of its present, but mostly
stays within the narrow boundaries of its main character’s life. Lee Chandler (Casey Affleck), who works as
the superintendent for a handful of apartment buildings in Quincy,
Massachusetts, must handle the difficulties created by the sudden death of his
older brother Joe back in his hometown of Manchester by the Sea. And that’s about it, that’s the whole subject
of the film. Throughout the movie Lee
attempts to figure out the next steps in his life and form some sort of
relationship with his brother’s sixteen-year-old son Patrick (Lucas
Hedges). In the process those flashbacks
reveal the tragedy that in effect chased Lee out of his home town and created
the sad emptiness of his present life. A
drunk and a brawler who steadfastly resists even the slightest human
connection, whether from a woman in a bar, the mother of his nephew’s
girlfriend, or even his ex-wife eager for some communication, Lee excludes
anyone who attempts to penetrate the carapace that surrounds his pain and
protects him from the world.
The performances rhyme with the subjects and rhythms of the film, so that
the mostly working class people seem completely real, not acting so much as
living their mostly drab, awkward, ordinary lives. Casey Affleck plays Lee Chandler in a
remarkable series of understated conversations and odd silences, only
occasionally allowing the combustion inside his spirit to flame out in anger
and violence. The whole cast matches him
perfectly, especially Lucas Hedges as his nephew Patrick and Michelle Williams
as his ex-wife, who shares his tragedies and heartbreak but cannot enter the
prison he has constructed for himself.
Written and directed by Kenneth Lonergan, who clearly knows the place and
its people, the movie works on every level, so that its frequent establishing
shots of the actual town of Manchester by the Sea signal a brief, seamless
glimpse of the past or provide a bridge between scenes and sequences. Perhaps too literal and deliberate at times,
it nevertheless creates a world where everyone apparently suffers some terrible
loss, some failure of love, some bleak prospect of an unsatisfactory life
ahead. The script offers no solutions
and refuses to settle for any easy answers to its problems, some neat closure
of its action, which explains how really unusual a film Lonergan has made, a
slice of life more authentic than just about every other motion picture now
playing.
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