Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation is already probably the best-reviewed film of 2011, so nobody needs me to sit here and rattle on about
how great it is. But there is one aspect of it that I want to get into, a bit.
I’ve discussed elsewhere the problem of different acting
temperatures mixing in the same film – most recently in my review of Young Adult, where I felt Charlize Theron was giving a bullet of a performance in
a different movie than the rest of the cast, and not in a good way. I’ve chewed
off many a friendly ear over the years talking about this phenomenon. American
Beauty is a particularly egregious example; every single actor in it seems to
be in a completely different film, and it drives me up the wall. Literally -- I
once drunkenly scaled a wall to express my hatred of American Beauty.
Early on, we see Nader (Peyman Maadi) and Simin (Leila
Hatami), the married couple whose technical divorce sets the story in motion
(she wants to go abroad, he needs to stay in Iran to take care of his dying
father), going through their things. “I’m taking this CD,” she says, quietly,
holding up a disc. “Take whichever you want,” he says frustratedly,
dismissively. “No, just this one,” she says, pleasantly enough, though you can
tell she too is dying inside. Immediately, you can tell that these characters are
dealing with their current heartbreak in distinct ways: She’s being reasonable,
practical – forcing herself to be, of course – and he’s being bitter, totalizing,
almost apocalyptic.
We see that, left to his own devices, Nader is kind of an
all-or-nothing fellow, and this hard-charging attitude of his in part results
in a catastrophe once he hires Razieh (Sareh Bayat), the young, pious, poor woman
who begins working for him unbeknownst to her traditionalist husband. As played
by Bayat, Razieh is quiet, constantly withholding, and afraid to allow herself
to be in anyone’s space – in part because of her religion, but also because, we
suspect, that’s just how she is. Her refusal, or rather inability, to let Nader
know what’s going on with her – she’s pregnant, and unwell – or to seek any
help from anybody else even though she clearly needs it butts up against his
mile-a-minute obstinacy in the film’s central event, a misunderstanding with
rather dire consequences that in turn send the rest of the story into the
byzantine folds of Iran’s judicial system.
Now into the mix comes Hodjat, Razieh’s husband (Shahab
Hosseini), a completely new emotional movement unto himself. He’s impulsive,
potentially violent, frustrated, self-loathing -- a strange dynamo of constant
eruption and pullback (his classic pose seems to be to put two hands over his
forehead and almost slap himself, a strange little mixture of anger and regret
that we Middle Eastern men unfortunately do a lot). Once Hodjat enters the
story, the chemistry of the whole thing changes. Watch the way he interacts –
or, more accurately, combusts -- with Nader, whose bourgeois stubbornness lends
him a self-righteousness that Hodjat, for all his anger and resentment and
piety, can never have. It’s thrilling – that is, if something that is ultimately
so heartbreaking can really be called “thrilling.”
But that’s the thing about A Separation. It’s a relationship
drama where you’re constantly worried for everyone’s physical safety. And that
I think is partly due to these weird emotional/chemical reactions that Farhadi
and his cast set off. Every once in a while, these characters seem to
crash against each other, and the film explodes along with them -- gaining
urgency, power, danger as it moves relentlessly along, never quite allowing you
to see where it might go next.
"It’s a relationship drama where you’re constantly worried for everyone’s physical safety."
ReplyDeleteGotta like the tag. And the one that is the most vulnerable psychologically turns out to be never in danger physically, no?