Columbus
**** / *****
Directed
by: Kogonada.
Written
by: Kogonada.
Starring:
John
Cho (Jin), Haley Lu Richardson (Casey), Parker Posey (Eleanor), Erin Allegretti
(Emma), Rory Culkin (Gabriel), Jim Dougherty (Aaron), Michelle Forbes (Maria),
Rosalyn R. Ross (Christine), Lindsey Shope (Sarah), Shani Salyers Stiles
(Vanessa).
Columbus is an odd film – a quiet
film – that is a romance in the same way that a film like Lost in Translation
or Before Sunrise (the first one) is a romance – more about lost souls, stuck
in a place, and connecting for a brief period of time, than anything truly
romantic or sexual. The film takes place in Columbus, Indiana – a kind of Mecca
of modern architecture in an unlikely place, where two people with not much in
common, and no one else around, connect briefly. They are hometown girl Casey
(Haley Lu Richardson) – who unlike most of her classmates didn’t go off to
University this year, deciding to stay at home and work some dead end jobs, so
she can help her troubled mother instead, and outsider Jin (John Cho), a Korean
American, who has flown in because his architect father was supposed to give a
talk in the town, and had a stroke instead – living him close to death in the
hospital. The two talk and connect because, well, what else are they going to
do?
This is one of those films that
sneaks up on you a little bit. The early scenes involving Richardson’s Casey are
so kind of quiet, yet specific, as the writer/director Kogonada (making his
first film – and already exuding the confidence of a more experienced
filmmaker) and actress build this character from the inside out. Richardson,
who was quite good in last year’s teen comedy The Edge of Seventeen and this
year’s M. Night Shyamalan film Split, shows here just why she’s destined to be
a star. Like everything else in the movie, her performance is quiet – but it’s
confident. John Cho is also quite good as Jin – he doesn’t much want to talk
about his father – who he hadn’t spoken to in a year, and didn’t even know he
was taking this trip, and doesn’t really know what else to say. He knows
architecture because of his father – but says he hates it – and yet, it was
what initially bonds him with Casey, who is a self-described architecture nerd.
He forces her to think harder about why she likes what she likes – but not
quite in that condescending way that many guys do when talking to women. He’s
not mansplaining – because he is genuinely curious.
We see these characters apart
from each other as well – Casey with her mother, Michelle Forbes – who has had
a troubled life, and who she worries will go back to what didn’t work for her
before if she’s not there to parent her parent. And Jin with Eleanor (Parker
Posey), his father’s assistant, who Jin clearly has some sort of past with –
there is something hanging in the air between them that goes uncommented upon.
It’s nice to see both Forbes and Posey in good roles again, just as it’s nice
to see Cho get a chance in a real lead that genuinely explores his Asian
American roots. Yes, Richardson is the real star of the film – alongside the
beautiful architecture, but there’s a lot going on here.
Columbus is probably a little too
quiet for its own good, and perhaps deciding to premiere at Sundance wasn’t the
best choice (that film festival is known for a certain kind of indie film – and
this isn’t it). It’s quietly found an audience though – becoming a modest box
office hit, and I think it’s the type of film that will continue to find that audience
for years. It’s the type of film that seems perhaps a little too quiet, a
little too sleight as you watch it – but you find yourself thinking about days,
weeks, months, later. With any luck, everyone involved will go on to even
better things.
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