Sunday, December 5, 2021

Belfast

 


Score:  A

Directed by Kenneth Branaugh
Starring Caitriona Balfe, Jamie Dornan, Judi Dench, Ciaran Hinds, Jude Hill
Running time: 97 minutes
Rated PG-13

Long Story Short:  Belfast is the latest from writer-director Kenneth Branagh, an awards season contender that is also the filmmaker's most personal, intended as a semi-autobiography.  The film is led by its excellent cast, and Branagh achieves an impressive balance of a realistic style with riveting entertainment. Come for the acting, stay for the scenery and sounds; highly recommended for theater viewing.


In late 1960s Belfast, young Buddy (Hill) is growing up in a close-knit community with his brother,  parents and grandparents. A spasm of turmoil and violence - the beginning of the Troubles - jars the city, however, and so regular childhood life is soon joined by a parallel atmosphere of danger, tension, and increasing awareness of differences amongst what was once a unified community.  Even as Buddy passes by soldiers and checkpoints on his way to school each day, he is still more concerned with impressing the older kids, working on his math homework, and receiving the doting attention of his grandparents.  Buddy does also become more aware of his father's tenuous situation, one that threatens to disrupt his daily life even more than the Troubles.

Belfast may be a modest, small-scale drama but, loosely based on writer-director Kenneth Branagh's childhood, it is very well made from beginning to end in all facets, adding up to a big impact.  On the surface, it has obvious comparisons to the 2018 Best Picture winner, Roma.  It, too, was based on the upbringing of its filmmaker and, appropriate to the theme of memory, shot in black and white.  They also both contrast a fairly ordinary family life with nearby political upheaval and violence.  Still, the structure and tone of the films are distinct.  Belfast is more dramatically-heightened, with both clearer narrative lines as well as more intentionally high and low points, emotionally.  But Belfast is driven primarily by a scene-by-scene, day-by-day realism like Roma, a mode that is effectively given shape and direction by the supporting elements of a few family "plot points" and the background of the Troubles.  There are many shots of the streets of Belfast, sometimes bright and full of children and laughter; at others dark and quiet with perhaps a single man patrolling the middle.  The family home also receives lots of attention.

Driving the realistic scenes of Belfast is an outstanding cast.  Jude Hill as Buddy, an 8-10-year-old stand in for Branagh, is among the best child actors I've seen.  He is really the key to the film, present in almost every scene, and following him was as natural as watching a documentary, yet hitting all the beats in  entertaining and/or emotional ways throughout.  Not even a glimmer of self-awareness in the corner of his eye; this is a true performance of childhood innocence.  The parents, naturally well-attuned to both their children's ordinary development as well as the harrowing conflict all around them, are also played with effective realism by Caitriona Balfe and Jamie Dornan.  Balfe gets the more substantial role and provides the film's biggest emotional moments and fireworks in an excellent performance; Dornan is good, too, in a more subtle, side role.  And Ciaran Hinds and Judi Dench mostly just get to have fun, as grandparents should, but each also gets some powerful moments as well, befitting their talents.

Belfast doesn't rely on only its intriguing characters and specific locations; there is plenty to keep someone restless like me engaged.  The first scene is the showiest of the film, while also setting the stage well for what is to come.  I don't want to spoil it, but it all takes place on a single block, the camera swooping up and down it, while a radical transformation takes place before your eyes.  The running length is just about perfect, as is the pacing; Branagh keeps the tone consistent throughout, but mixes up the dialogue versus the still shots, the serious and the humorous effectively.  As mentioned, Belfast is shot in black and white and this plus some impressive cinematography makes it a pleasure to simply look at.  Finally, it's also nice to listen to.  Van Morrison did the soundtrack and his slightly jazzy instrumentals are fun; they seem a little out of place at first, but play a key role in setting the overall tone.  And music plays a key role in a dance scene seemingly out of the blue near the end; it was both the most joyful and, surprisingly, touching of the movie to me.

***

Belfast is the first Oscar contender I've seen this year - in fact, the first I've seen in a theater for nearly two years.  It was quite a way to start that familiar season on the movie calendar - I could easily see this winning, and deserving, the Best Picture prize.  I'm not quite sure it ranks as an all-time classic yet, but it is certainly high-quality in every way, and also among the most entertaining of its kind.  Hopefully I'll continue to get to see a variety of movie genres at the theater in these next few months - there are some blockbusters I'm looking forward to, and with any luck some smaller films like Belfast will pop up, too.


* By Studio and or Graphic Artist - [1], Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68638309

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