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Arts Culture

Holiday in hiding: Happiest Season is a missed opportunity to kick open the closet

A new relationship during the holidays is a recipe for hilarity and high jinks. There’s meeting the family, heavily enforced traditions, and all sorts of other religious and historical wrenches to throw into the spokes of what could be cozy couple time. Happiest Season takes on all of these elements, plus the added layer of hidden identity—with mixed results.

The hidden part of this Christmas comedy is thanks to Harper (Mackenzie Davis). She loves the holidays and her family—and her girlfriend Abby (Kristen Stewart). The fact that Harper has not come out to her family is not only a shock to Abby, but waiting to tell her until they are driving to Harper’s family Christmas puts Abby in the position of lying on Harper’s behalf and hiding her own identity as well. When Abby asks, “It is five days, how bad can it be?” she soon gets her answer.

Harper’s family is not only completely unaware of her sexual orientation, they are intense. Mom Tipper (Mary Steenburgen) is obsessed with posting pictures of their perfect family online. Dad Ted (Victor Garber) is running for mayor. Sister Sloane (Alison Brie) seems to be more uptight than everyone else, and sister Jane (Mary Holland) is the black sheep, though that is a fairly low bar in this high-profile, wealthy suburban Pittsburgh family.

From here we get the usual dose of expected family gags. Sloane has a pair of creepy twin kids who pop into rooms silently and judge. A trip to the mall ends in a massive miscommunication between Abby and the mall security. Ice skating bonds the three sisters through competition and knitted garments. And Harper has incidents with not one but two exes who still run in similar circles as her parents. We’ve seen this before.

Happiest Season shines when it takes its time to deal with the uniqueness of its premise. But the film insists on spending far more time on the less remarkable moments. Ted and Tipper forcing a dinner with Harper’s handsome and successful ex Connor (Jake McDorman) is awkward enough, but adds little to the plot and doesn’t deepen Harper’s character—things would be just as awkward were they all straight. It’s the moments Harper is with her secret high school girlfriend Riley (Aubrey Plaza) that help us understand how Harper got Abby into this situation, and bring nuance into the film. These brief windows into the complexity of their lives, more so than people who never have a closet to come out of, humanize and emphasize. This is not merely a white lie, it is Harper living in fear of being rejected for being her true self.

To that end, Davis feels a little wasted in this role. Aside from the inevitable emotional climax on Christmas morning, she plays a bland woman who is concerned with family appearances, and seems quite happy in her hometown. She effortlessly rises to the demands of the character, but as one of the more interesting actresses working today, the rest of the film feels like a lost opportunity. Others have to do the heavy lifting to make Harper seem intriguing and torn, as she glides through the visit relatively unscathed.

While Stewart does an incredible job of managing a smiling but disappointed visage throughout, Holland and Daniel Levy are the ones stealing the scenes. Holland takes what could have been a throwaway, comic sidekick and turns her into the confident but quirky sister standing in the shadows of Harper and Sloane. She seems aware of their differences but assured of her value in the world—and that confidence makes her the one to watch in any ensemble scene. Levy, as Abby’s best friend John, is the fast-talking supportive rock that Abby needs to get through these five days. He’s the only one looking out for her, and their chemistry sells the friendship.

Happiest Season should be lauded for not only addressing the complicated and weighty issues around coming out, but also for having a queer relationship at the heart of a traditional Christmas family comedy. Yet, it still stops short of condemning hatred and homophobia. There are hints of the negative impact that such outdated and ignorant beliefs can have on lives, thus justifying Harper’s reluctance to express herself, but the film never goes so far as to identify these beliefs as the real villain here. Sure, Harper’s repeated lies are problematic and the source of funny antics, but Happiest Season avoids connecting the dots to the homophobia that drove her to lie for all these years.

Happiest Season is a solid addition to the legions of heteronormative Christmas movies. Had Harper been a more engaging character or if it focused on what sets it apart from other holiday films, it might have been a great one.

Categories
Arts

Movie review: Tully tackles the emotional complexities of parenthood

It’s easy to reduce your identity to before and after you have children when your whole life feels like one long haze of sleepless nights and diaper changes. But what happened to the person who came before? Do they cease to be? How do you reconcile who you’ve become with who you were when your whole life was ahead of you?

That’s the central question of Tully, the new Diablo Cody-Jason Reitman team-up starring Charlize Theron as a conflicted mother. We meet Marlo (Theron) and her husband Drew (Ron Livingston) when she is pregnant with their third child. Her oldest daughter is 8 and feeling the plague of self-doubt, and her 6-year-old son suffers from an undiagnosed emotional disorder that no one wants to directly address (euphemisms like “quirky” abound in meetings with his principal).

Tully
R, 96 minutes
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

Within a week of Marlo’s delivery date, two significant things happen: She randomly encounters Violet, her former roommate and possible romantic partner from what we learn later were her wilder days in Brooklyn (the knowing glances speak volumes). Then at a dinner with her wealthy brother, he offers to pay for a night nanny who will care for the newborn overnight so the parents can get some sleep. Marlo rejects the idea initially, but the exhaustion of it all catches up with her and she employs Tully (Mackenzie Davis).

Tully is a godsend, allowing Marlo to rest and have the energy to be a genuinely engaged parent. More than that, Marlo sees much of herself in Tully, and their relationship quickly turns personal. Why this happens and where it goes from there are best left unsaid, but rest assured there are no cheap love triangles, no unnecessary soap opera dramatics. Everything here is substantial, and even if you predict what many are calling a “twist,” the emotional payoff loses none of its resonance.

Much of the early discussion surrounding Tully has been from mental health specialists noting the similarity between Marlo’s experience and an underdiagnosed condition called postpartum psychosis. The comparison is presented as a negative one, that the film inaccurately represents the symptoms and what sufferers experience. To fully explore this idea would mean revealing key plot twists of the film, but it is worth considering. Cody’s metaphorical framework does not seem to have been intended as a direct exploration of PPP, but a representation of the conversations that most people would like to have with their former selves. This is not a sanitized depiction of mental illness as we often see from people seeking Oscars for their bravery, when all they did was avoid the more difficult questions. Marlo’s journey is real, and the fact that it mirrors that of someone with PPP is unfortunate. More could have been done to differentiate the two, but there’s too much valuable stuff here to write off.

Theron continues to astound, and her chemistry with Davis may be the best on-screen partnership of the year. The depictions of the highs and lows of parenthood are remarkable and possibly unprecedented in a mainstream film. There’s a bravery to Tully’s subject matter that will captivate you even before you learn where it is all headed, and it is easily one of the year’s best films.


Playing this week

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
377 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056

A Quiet Place, Avengers: Infinity War, I Feel Pretty, Life of the Party, Revenge

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

A Quiet Place, Avengers: Infinity War, Bad Samaritan, Black Panther, I Feel Pretty, Overboard, Rampage, Super Troopers 2, Truth or Dare

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000  

A Quiet Place, Avengers: Infinity War, I Feel Pretty, Isle of Dogs, Itzhak, Lean on Pete