Premium
This is an archive article published on February 18, 2011

Rabbit Hole

The death of a child is,not to put too fine a point on it,shattering.

Director: John Cameron Mitchell

Cast: Nicole Kidman,Aaron Eckhart,Dianne West,Tammy Blanchard,Sandra Oh,Miles Teller

Rating:**1/2

Movie Review: Rabbit Hole The death of a child is,not to put too fine a point on it,shattering. And the devastation that follows is non-negotiable. How do you live,after? ‘Rabbit Hole’,based on a play of the same name,takes this intractable problem and tosses it at young couple Becca and Howie,and invites us to see how they are doing,eight months after the tragedy.

Story continues below this ad

Truth is,they are doing very badly indeed. Becca ( Kidman,up for a Best Actress at the Oscars) is a zombie,moving from one room to another,erasing all signs of Danny. There’s no attempt at trying to come to terms with something you have no control over : a wild sister’s unexpected pregnancy is a cause,not for celebration,but more angry frustration. Howie’s ( Eckhart) constant efforts at trying to prise her,and them,out of it are rebuffed : all Becca wants is to dig herself deeper into the hole,and the only solace she can find is,ironically,from scarred rabbit Jason ( Teller),the schoolkid who was driving too fast that terrible day,and who didn’t swerve fast enough.

Doing grief is tricky. At its most effective,it can reach out and wrap itself around your heart. But Kidman is never given a chance to take it in,deep into herself,and bring it out. The appearance is all right—the pinched face,the sunken eyes,the careless putting together of the self,but you don’t feel it. Eckhart gets it right : it’s in the way he settles down in the settee,late at night,bringing his son alive in the video he has on his cellphone; it’s in the way he holds his wife,willing her to come back to him,to life.

Other performances make this film. Blanchard is terrific as Becca’s sister Izzy,who catches pregnant and who is unsure how to deal with her sibling’s downer on everything to do with her. So is Sandra Oh,playing a therapy junkie,who brings a nice texture to her brief role. When Becca’s mother ( West) talks about the loss of a child ( she loses an adult son,Becca’s brother) ,you see the weight that she’s carried all these years. But she doesn’t,like Kidman,make such heavy weather of it. It’s just there, says West,something you carry in your pocket,and once in a while you forget it’s there,and then you remember,and say ‘oh’.

Kidman tries too hard to get that ‘oh’ ,making ‘Rabbit Hole’ a much less effective vehicle for loss and reparation than it could have been.

shubhragupta@expressindia.com

Click here to follow Screen Digital on YouTube and stay updated with the latest from the world of cinema.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement