We Need to Do Something **
Dir: Sean King O’Grady. With:
Sierra McCormick, Vinessa Shaw, Pat Healy, Lisette Alexis. 97 mins. Cert: 18
A decade ago, Jeff Nichols
directed Take Shelter, a remarkably prophetic, big-picture drama with
Michael Shannon as a construction worker alienating his loved ones with his
insistence on building a bunker in readiness for gathering storms. It may be a
sign of a withering US indie sector that this far scrappier genre item aims to
generate comparably doomy vibes on a single set measuring barely forty square
feet.
Adapted by Max Booth III from
his own novella, Sean King O’Grady’s film unfolds primarily in a domestic
bathroom, to which uptight corporate drone Pat Healy, put-upon wife Vinessa
Shaw and the couple’s two children are confined after a felled tree dissects
their Tornado Alley property. It’s soon clear this is one of those metaphorical
bathrooms, representative of a much bigger space. Squandering any remaining
resources and striving to reimpose control, dad insists “it’s not the end of
the goddamn world”. Yet we’re clearly within touching distance.
With its circumscribed focus,
this promising B-movie scenario proves a solid platform for the perma-game
Healy, whose recent trajectory – from fresh-faced helpmate (The Innkeepers)
via corruptible patsy (Cheap Thrills) to high-strung bully here – neatly
parallels the arc of the white male in modern American cinema. There’s less for
Shaw, passively observing as the image of maternal patience, but the Imogen
Poots-ish Sierra McCormick gets a leg-up as the teenage cutter whose life is
complicated enough before dad lobs her phone outside.
Around them, however, the
dramatic limitations become swiftly apparent. Flashbacks to McCormick’s ominous
liaison with a Gothy pal and an Ozzy Osbourne voice cameo provide a sketchy
sense of the world beyond the bathroom door, but we’re mostly stuck gawping at
ever more dishevelled shut-ins who – even amid the splatter-heavy finale –
don’t entirely know what they’re up against, and remain uncertain what to do.
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