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Tully (2018)
In off-Oscar-season times, originality stands out and one of the most original you’ll see this year is Tully (2018).Sure, it is full of recognisable scenes, moments, and messages that not even extraordinary acting can hide. But it is the way the narrative has been framed and the unexpected climactic reveal that leaves this film lingering in your memory long after its viewing.
We enter the story through the cliché-portal of a stressed-out and hugely pregnant Marlo (Charlize Theron) who is struggling to be a good mother for her eight-year old daughter and six-year old autism-spectrum son. Her useless husband Drew (Ron Livingston) expects dinner on the table each night and then retreats to his video games. Despite friend’s promising that “it gets easier each time”, the arrival of the unplanned third child becomes the tipping point for her downward spiral into a world of sleepless domestic chaos. She initially declines her wealthy brother-in-law’s offer of a night nanny but on a day of multiple disasters she snaps and calls for help. Young and attractive Tullly (Mackenzie Davis) is soon on her doorstep and Marlo’s world changes immediately. Tully delivers the baby for feeding, the house is clean, cakes are baked, and Marlo has a new best friend. Motherhood is a calm place until some weeks later when Tully announces she is leaving and events take unexpected turns that land Marlo in hospital.
At one level the story feels familiar, maybe slightly fanciful, especially if you are a parent. The idea that you can be in a pit of despair and dial-in a home-delivered perfect solution is deliciously appealing. Some viewers will experience the film purely at a literal level that is comically foreshadowed in the trailer, especially the container of freshly pumped mother’s milk tipping over and the cell-phone that is dropped on baby’s head. Other viewers will spot the early clues but not realise until the climactic revelation that this film is a serious case study in post-natal psychosis.
Combining magical realism, comedic drama, and a little understood mental condition into an entertaining movie is brave and original cinema. Releasing it in time for Mother’s Day is almost mischievously deceptive. Charlize Theron gives an award-worthy performance that is a long way from comedy or fantasy: her portrait of a mother on and beyond the edge of sanity is grounded in the gritty daily grind of being a parent.
There needs to be more films like Tully. While it is entertaining and even formative for some audiences to swoon over super-heroines and other fantasy females, those celluloid icons shed little light on how to live in the real world. Despite the controversy stirred up among motherhood and psychiatric fraternities, Tullycan help improve understanding of post-natal mental health.
Director: Jason Reitman
Stars: Charlize Theron, Mackenzie Davis, Ron Livingston
Dear CineMuse. I wish you’d review “Breath” . (Sorry for this off-topic comment)
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It has been drafted and will be published in a ocuple of days. Look forward to hearing your thoughts.
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Great! Now to read “Tully”.
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It was also really slow and boring, except for people like me who just admire watching
Charlize Theron do another unglamorous star turn.
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Thanks for the comment. Theron certainly does an unglamorous star turn in this film, but I wasnt bored for a minute.
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“Tullycan help improve understanding of post-natal mental health.” I hope it does.
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Thanks for visiting Jennifer. Ironically, the public discourse and controversy generated by this film is itself proof of the value of such films. Anything which draws attention to mental health in all its facets is a good thing, despite any semantic imprecision that may be in Tully.
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It’s a bit more than semantics, but I get your point.
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You are right of course. Poor choice of term on my part.
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Sorry, mate, I don’t know how I missed this post. End of the school year business, I’d say. Nice review! I am waiting to rent it. Glad you liked it. My daughter saw it and told me the ending, so, I’m looking forward to the magical realism.
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How could she!!
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An extremely engaging film including many elements of unexpected humor. I was aware of the magic realism to come, having read some spoiler alerts and continuing to read undeterred. Perhaps the experience would have been slightly enhanced if it had come as a surprise. I’m not sure.
Any viewer who has survived the joys and disasters of bringing up young children should have cause to empathise.
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I would have not enjoyed this film as much had I known in advance of its ‘big secret’. Sure, there are hints along the way, but its climax is both clever and artfully constructed.
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Hi CineMus. I have to agree. Ever since we were led astray with film “A Beautiful Mind”, I’ve been pleasantly surprised when a director has chosen to do this. “The Dinner” ventured into this territory as the ending was very different from our imaginings at the start of the film. I enjoy being artfully deceived….as long as this is not overplayed. It’s a great pity the film has not had a longer run on the Sydney cinema circuit.
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I’ll have you know I watched “Tully” for the second time yesterday. I’m presenting it to the city group and I wanted to be sure. This time I tried to pick up all the clues I’d missed in the first showing.
The song “You only Live Twice” was strangely haunting and appropriate earlier in the running time. It was an incredibly moving film IMO and was complemented by the RN program “All in the Mind” this week. (The talk was on strange brains).
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