by jellydonut25 » Fri Jan 29, 2016 3:41 pm
Room:
(Copying and pasting from my letterboxd review)
This is a difficult movie to discuss without using spoilers, but since most of the people who might read this will likely not have seen this yet, I'll give it a whirl.
Room tells the story of "Ma" (Who we later find out is named "Joy") and Jack, a mother and son who are confined to a single room all day every day. They get visited once a week on Sundays by "Old Nick" who brings them food and clean clothes. We learn over the course of the film (mostly the first half) that Jack and Joy are not exactly in the room by choice. We don't know whether they are being held there against their will, or there's something in the outside world that forces them to be there, or if it's something Joy agreed to do once upon a time with a specific end-date but the isolation is starting to wear on her. The truth of the matter becomes clear before too long, but figuring it out is part of the greatness of watching the movie and informs so much of Joy and Jack's relationship and the audience's perception of it, that I really don't want to spoil it.
We come to understand Jack has never been outside "Room" and learn the way he views "the world" and the way it forms his personality.
Ultimately, the movie (especially the extraordinarily strong first half) is about the relationship between Joy and Jack and how we, the viewers, feel about it. My biggest complaint is that the second half doesn't have anything quite as emotionally powerful as the pivotal moment at the middle of the film, but at the same time, I don't know if I would change the film, because so much of the second half gives us insight into how being in Room has affected Jack and his world view and his relationship with his mother.
Propelled by spectacular performances by Brie Larson (Oscar, please), and child actor Jason Tremblay (one of the best, if not THE best, child performances I've ever seen in a film; shame he isn't nominated), Room is a hard-hitting, emotionally powerful film that proves "small, independent, critically revered, and nominated for many awards" doesn't mean "stuffy, cold, emotionless, and pandering to the specific tastes of the Academy." Go see Room, it's absolutely fantastic.
5/5.