We're not watching a run-of-the-mill drama, then, so much as confirmation bias running rampant. Seemingly liberated from his mother's clutches - and thus at least some of his woes - Beau is handed a second chance at life, only to mess things up all over again. (There are elements of a doomier Groundhog Day: death presents not as a waystation, but as the only way out of a cycle of defeat.) Sprung from his bathtub (read: manmade womb) by an intruder clinging spider-like to his ceiling, Beau is hit by a bus and stabbed while he's down; adopted and nursed back to something like health by an outwardly doting couple (Nathan Lane and Amy Ryan), he makes an enemy of the daughter he displaces and a mortal foe of a burly Army vet (Denis Ménochet, of all people) who surely represents all those alpha jocks who once shoved Young Ari into a high-school locker. If something can go wrong, it will go wrong, which again isn't great from a dramatic point of view, but how things will go wrong proves less predictable, and you can still (sort of) admire the movie's cascading concatenations of misery: Aster sets up Beau's humiliations like Rube Goldberg machines, such that even a humdrum change of medication provides the trigger for his protagonist being evicted from his flat and replaced by wilding derelicts. Beau is Afraid never lacks for new disasters - it's self-evidently the work of an overactive, hyper-agitated imagination - but it's really all part of the same disaster, which is to say this one poor chump's so-called life. There isn't a situation Aster can envision where Beau doesn't fumble the ball or screw the pooch. A potentially healing retreat into art - via a theatre group he finds encamped in a forest - is bloodily interrupted when his past catches up with him; his closeness to his mother (represented by a pieta trinket he clings to) results in a series of disasters with the opposite sex; and a last-reel reunion with his childhood sweetheart leads to a bad end all round. Cut to black - or, rather, cut to blacker still.
You will of course need to maintain some level of interest in a comfortably appointed Caucasian filmmaker's abiding hang-ups. Beau is, in the end, very much Film Twitter's Stardust Memories, the kind of confessional project only certain creatives have typically been empowered to undertake, and its closing 45 minutes, which see Aster raising any number of red flags while his trousers and undergarments slowly slip to his ankles, exposing his arse to the breeze, really need referring to a specialist, not the multiplex audience. Yet in its own perverse fashion, Beau is Afraid goes some way to explain why Western movies are now in the state they're in. In the past, American creatives strode confidently through the world, meeting life's vicissitudes with a robust good humour. Now, if Aster's film is anything to go by, they're pill-popping neurotics, prone to awkward cringes and deathly shudders when they're not simply cowering in the corner with their heads in their hands and their fingers in their ears. Comic books provide an obvious retreat into the comforting certainties of childhood, for them as for us - that, and the doubtless staggering cheques involved, explains why so many directors have gone back down that route. It's well-paid therapy, even if the work that results from it is so rarely good to watch. But perhaps we have no right to expect good movies - movies worthy of our finite time, movies that make us feel a little better about that finite time - when the folks making them, even those folks (like Aster) granted a little more independence than most, are apparently such sorry, pitiful wrecks.
Beau is Afraid is now playing in selected cinemas.
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