“The Nest” Is An Engrossing Slow Burn - Hollywood Minds

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Tuesday, September 22, 2020

“The Nest” Is An Engrossing Slow Burn

“La Llorona” starts with a focus on a family of bad people, namely that of a general named Enrique (Julio Diaz), his wife, his daughter, and the general’s granddaughter, Sara (Ayla-Elea Hurtado). In the film’s opening moments, the general is awoken from his sleep by the sound of a woman crying.

Somehow, Sean Durkin made his breakthrough movie Martha Marcy May Marlene nearly a decade ago. Even harder to believe, sadly, is that it has taken him nine years to get a follow-up feature made. Well, at the very least, that wait is now over, as The Nest is out in release. A definite left-turn in some ways from his prior outing, it’s another acting showcase and slow burn that mixes drama and thriller elements. The psychology of his characters remains Durkin’s main concern, and that’s what makes this work so well. Well, that and a pair of terrific actors relishing the opportunity to lay into each other, of course.


“The Nest” Is An Engrossing Slow Burn

The film is a drama, set in the 1980s. On the surface, entrepreneur Rory O’Hara (Jude Law) and his wife Allison O’Hara (Carrie Coon) seem to have the perfect life. They have a daughter in Samantha (Oona Roche) and a son in Ben (Charlie Shotwell), as well as comfort. Then, Rory announces that the family is moving to England so he can pursue a lucrative opportunity. No sooner do they move into an old country manor than they all begin to unravel in their own ways. Worse, the small fractures in Allison and Rory’s union begin to grow. First, it’s money issues. Then, it’s bickering. Soon, they’re all but enemies, both in and out of the home. While the family crumbles, things only show signs of getting worse. Durkin writes and directs, with supporting players including Adeel Akhtar, Tanya Allen, Michael Culkin, and more. Mátyás Erdély provides the cinematography, while Richard Reed Parry contributes the score. 
Watching Carrie Coon and Jude Law bitterly spar is far more of a pleasure than you’d expect. Coon unravels in a manner more befitting a fright flick (though this decidedly isn’t horror), but the venom she eventually begins to spew at her husband is pitch-perfect. Law and his character’s charade slowly but surely is seen for what it is, and the way he lashes out, especially at his wife, is some of his most cutting work. Together, they’re absolutely on fire, whether it’s in the more tender early moments or by the end, when they’re nearly at each other’s throats. Both have rarely been better, allowing Sean Durkin’s script to sing, while the director himself fills the screen with unsettling images. It really does come together nicely, provided you get on its wavelength.
The Nest would possibly frustrate some, regardless of fashionable vital acclaim/raves, particularly should you’re in search of extra floor stage process. It isn’t horror, it isn’t a real mental mystery, and the answer is most likely smaller than you’re in search of. At the similar time, should you simplest focal point on that, you fail to see Durkin’s abilities, in addition to the paintings Coon and Law are presenting. This is this type of flick you simply give your self over to, permitting its explicit temper to scrub over you. Either it really works or it doesn’t paintings. For me, it unquestionably did. At the very least, it’s not possible to not respect Coon and Law.
Now enjoying in theaters and to be had On Demand on November 17th, The Nest is every other distinctive effort from a novel storyteller in Sean Durkin. If his final film labored for you, this will have to too, albeit in a a ways other means. This one zigs the place that one zags, and that’s a thrilling prospect for his occupation, going ahead. Mostly, you simply want some persistence and an open thoughts.

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