Every year another indie could be the last one ever shot on film. But 35mm keeps hanging on, and beautifully so in Dee Reess Sundance darling. Memorable performances from a young cast bring to life the heart-rending story of Alike (Adepero Oduye), a 17-year-old lesbian growing up in a socially conservative black family. Of all the reasons to see this in select cities while you can, Bradford Youngs award-winning visuals is one of them. The winner of last years cinematography award at Sundance, Pariah features some of the most skillful work youll see this year.
Young frames the actors up close like a Dardenne brothers film, while avoiding claustrophobia with consistently smart camera work. There are no complicated visual moves, nor are there dramatic panoramas, and you wont find any grand set pieces. What you will find are masterfully evocative low-lit sequences and great poster moments, such as Lees ride home under the fluorescent lights of the city bus. Also, its 35mm. If you shoot it, they will come.
Oduye and Pernell Walker are naturals as Alike (nicknamed Lee) and Laura, best friends with two very different upbringings. Lees overprotective mother (Kim Wayans) widens a rift in denying Lees increasingly obvious sexual orientation (God doesnt make mistakes, she tells her obstinate daughter, attempting to scare her straight), while Lauras mother refuses to even speak to her. Reess heartfelt, if well-trod, script shows us not only Lees specific struggles with homosexuality in a close-minded household, but the commonalities in most teens. Lee lives in a brownstone in Brooklyn, but this could easily take place anywhere in the country. The trials that she and her family face are not unlike those of any community, and this is largely a film about what it means to grow up with adversity, gay or straight.
A particular standout is TV veteran Charles Parnell as Lees caring yet often imperious police detective father, Arthur. He plays this type to a tee. Arthur behaves like the stern father he believes hes supposed to be, yet has such repressed emotion that seeing his eldest daughter grow up in front of him only brings him pain. His conflicthes perpetually unsure whether to befriend Lee or discipline herwill stay in your mind. By the end, after all of Lees fights with her frustrated mother, its still Arthurs word of approval that we wait on.
I wont spoil it, because you should see this and cry as much as I did, but Im still waiting for Arthurs word of approval. Not necessarily from him but from the millions like him. What is great about Pariah is that however clichéd the script may be (teen overcomes adverse conditions at home to follow her dreams), its all about our own lives. Clichés are there for a reason, and Pariah is the best example you could ask for. If a script feels predictable, yet evokes emotion at all the right moments; if it tells a story youve heard before, yet feels true, then the film is doing something right. There are kids with adversity all over, still waiting for the Arthurs of the world to open up their hearts in acceptance.
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