Michelle Pfeiffer
has made a career out of playing devastating beauties—women who bewitch
and beguile but ultimately seem unattainable. From early, showy roles
in movies like “Grease 2” (which I love with zero irony) and “Scarface” through her more serious, Oscar-nominated work including “Dangerous Liaisons” and “The Fabulous Baker Boys”
to her scene-stealing supporting performance in last year’s “mother!”
Pfeiffer’s stunning looks and magnetic screen presence often have
defined whatever character she’s played.
But a serious actress who shouldn’t be underestimated has long
lurked beneath those piercing cheekbones and blue eyes. “Where Is Kyra?”
finally allows her to explore the darker, unvarnished side of her
talent and gives her the opportunity to do perhaps the best work of her
lengthy, eclectic career.
The irony is that Pfeiffer not only has
to disappear into the role, she nearly disappears, period, within the
film’s working-class Brooklyn setting. Director and co-writer Andrew Dosunmu
once again explores what life is like for myriad New Yorkers struggling
to get by on a daily basis, as he did in 2013’s searing “Mother of George.”
Here, Pfeiffer’s Kyra is our conduit to a world of anxiety and
destitution within a seemingly exciting, glamorous city. And she’s
absolutely heartbreaking with just the slightest register of sadness in a
gesture or facial expression.
Dosunmu and his “Mother of George” collaborator, co-writer Darci Picoult, quietly introduce us to Kyra and her elderly mother (Suzanne Shepherd)
as they go about their nighttime routine in the dark, cramped apartment
they share. In time, we’ll learn that Kyra is recently divorced and
unemployed, and she has moved back in with her ailing mom to help her
with daily activities like bathing and errands. Finding even a part-time
filing job is tough, but Kyra dyes her roots and puts on her game face,
hitting the pavement each day in pursuit of elusive menial labor.
Working once again with the hugely talented cinematographer Bradford Young,
Dosunmu frames them from afar—down a dark hallway or through a crack in
the bathroom door. We’re spying on them, and we don’t want to make a
sound for fear of disturbing the intimacy of their bubble, their bond.
Young has such a beautiful, evocative touch, using low light and
painterly shadows to establish a mood and create a sense of isolation.
That’s been true in the wide variety of films he’s shot, from “Pariah”
and “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” to “A Most Violent Year” and his Oscar-nominated work on “Arrival.” Here, the effect seems to obscure Kyra’s existence even further—to make her world seem oppressively, inescapably small.
But Kyra’s situation grows even direr when her mother dies. The
moment is powerful in its silence and stillness. Dosunmu pushes into the
living room from the hallway ever so steadily as Kyra walks in and
realizes her mother has stopped breathing in her recliner. She carefully
reaches over and turns off the oxygen tank. She doesn’t know whether to
sit or stand. She’s stunned, understandably—all of which Pfeiffer
conveys in the space of a single shot.
The awkward small talk
Kyra makes to the few people who attend the funeral indicates just how
little of a life she’s had outside of her mother and these walls. Now,
she has to figure out how to hold onto the apartment without any income.
But
just when you suspect “Where is Kyra?” is going to be too bleak in a
one-note, stoic way, Kyra lets it all out once she gets back home, and
the overwhelming sense of being totally alone pours out of her. Then,
finally, comes the title in all caps, giant white letters on a black
screen, yanking you out of that melancholy and signaling a change.
“Where
Is Kyra?” becomes a more actively stressful movie as Kyra resorts to
increasingly dangerous schemes to stay afloat. You know she’s in bad
shape when you can hear the sound of her scraping coins out of the
bottom of her purse to afford a drink at the local dive bar. But things
gets worse, even as they seem to get vaguely better with the
introduction of Kiefer Sutherland’s Doug, who’s sitting a couple of stools down at the bar and also happens to be a neighbor in her mom’s building.
Doug
gives her rare chance to forge a connection with someone, and while
she’s initially resistant, it’s obvious she needs the human contact.
Soon they’re doing shots, and you can imagine where it goes from
there—and yet their relationship remains a mystery, even as it evolves.
It’s unclear whether Kyra truly cares for Doug—who is decent and kind
and also struggling economically, although not as drastically as she
is—or she just craves the company.
There’s a great shot of the
two of them leaning against the wall at a building-wide gathering,
drinking beers together. Dosunmu places them slightly off-center in the
frame and shoots them at a distance, amid wood paneling and sparse white
lights. In holding that shot for a while, he makes you want to lean in
to see and hear them as they fumble through half-hearted attempts at
flirting.
Eventually, Doug ends up being dragged into her devious plan to
survive. You sort of can’t blame her, though; “Where Is Kyra?” depicts
in spare but vivid ways her escalating desperation, and the dread of her
creeping, abject poverty. She can see her breath when she climbs into
bed at night because she can’t afford to turn on the heat. (At least she
still has a bed, though; she’s had to sell much of her mother’s
furniture.)
In the film’s most deeply uncomfortable scene, Kyra
goes back to her ex-husband, begging for money. The camera holds on her
face for the entire conversation, registering every flinch and sigh as
she shuts her eyes and pushes out the words. It’s pure survival
instinct, and Pfeiffer portrays it chillingly. Kyra has to be various
versions of herself depending on whom she’s with and what she needs from
them—but the act becomes more difficult the deeper she gets in over her
head.
The one element of “Where Is Kyra?” that isn’t the
slightest bit subtle is its score. Especially in moments of panic or
crisis, it cranks up with a noisy, dissonant distortion. It seems
intentionally off-putting—like the sound of a metal door that’s rusty
and stuck and needs to be oiled—signifying perhaps that Kyra is still
here, and she’s not going quietly.
dfgh76
No comments:
Post a Comment