By Subhash K Jha
Film: "Our Souls At Night"; Cast: Robert Redford and Jane Fonda; Director: Ritesh Batra; Rating: *****
Ritesh Batra is a filmmaker who loves silence and embraces it with all its inbuilt hazards and uncertainties. We've seen him work wonders with wordless emotions in his earlier works. So, no surprise if here he once again weaves a luminous lucidity into the looming stillness of a landscape that won't judge mankind.
With "Our Souls At Night", a deeply stirring gentle humane drama about two autumnal souls drifting together in ways that "The Bridges Of Madison County" could never fathom, Batra joins the ranks of the greatest living filmmakers. And we are not speaking of India alone.
Batra doesn't allow himself to get overawed in the august presence of Robert Redford and Jane Fonda.
Having given them to play lonely old characters hungering for company -- in short humanising them to the point of completely denuding them of their mythical status -- Batra then proceeds to bring them together in a tale so soft, slender, tender and fragile, it could easily lapse into insignificant understatement.
This is where Batra scores over other modern filmmakers who deal with human relationships on a low key decibel. He strips Fonda and Redford of all their Hollywood-legend aura and yet preserves all their charisma. The more vulnerable and human they become, the more we embrace their inadequacies for what they are: legacies of mortality embedded in immortal personalities.
This remarkably quiet film opens with Fonda playing the stately but broken Addie, knocking on her neighbour Louis (Redford)'s door one night with an offer he dare not resist.
Since we are both so devoid of companionship, why don't we sleep together, Addie suggests. From there, Batra's screenwriters (Scott Neustadter, Michael Weber) build on Kent Haruf's slender story of old age and solitude, into a reverberant requiem on life and mortality.
Besides the sheer beauty and harmony with which Batra textures the protagonists' gentle journey, the film is also unforgettable for the way it is shot. The green stillness of small-town Colorado is such a befitting counterpoint to the film's ode to lonely hearts, it is almost as though the director's vision is in collusion with his characters' inner landscape.
Batra is never in a hurry to build Redford and Fonda's relationship. The warmth and glow that creeps into their friendship is as organically achieved as the gentle sunrises and sunsets that peek over the Colorado skyline.
"Our Souls At Night" is a very beautiful film. And cinematographer Stephen Goldblatt must be credited for capturing the sublimity of the Coloradan landscape without fawning over it.
The film is not afraid to let the characters think while we wait for them to articulate their thoughts. A major part of the film's magic comes from Redford-Fonda's togetherness. Watching these two stalwarts come together to serenade the vicissitudes of vulnerability, is a pleasure that far transcends the thrill of two superstars making a comeback.
Matthias Schoenaerts as Fonda's son and Judy Greer as Redford's daughter leave a very strong impact in their limited screen time. But it's the little boy Iain Armitage playing Fonda's grandson who proves a major turning point in the plot, providing, as it were, a point of innocence and reclamation in a story that repudiates all the benefits of dramatic construction and tension to simply meditate on the mellowness of existence.
The background score (Elliot Goldenthal) merges so seamlessly with the goings-on that we never get to know when this little film with a big heart just steals away a part of us never to return it to us again.
"Our Souls At Night" released on Netflix on September 29.
About VDC
Doraiah Chowdary Vundavally is a Software engineer at VTech . He is the news editor of SocialNews.XYZ and Freelance writer-contributes Telugu and English Columns on Films, Politics, and Gossips. He is the primary contributor for South Cinema Section of SocialNews.XYZ. His mission is to help to develop SocialNews.XYZ into a News website that has no bias or judgement towards any.