We Need To Talk About Kevin (15)

Film

Drama

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>5/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Tue Oct 18 2011

British filmmaker Lynne Ramsay’s third feature after ‘Ratcatcher’ (1999) and ‘Morvern Callar’ (2002) is an adaptation of Lionel Shriver’s best-selling book of the same name, but there’s nothing remotely literary about Ramsay’s long-awaited comeback. She ditches the novel’s structure of an American wife, Eva (Tilda Swinton), writing letters to her husband, Franklin (John C Reilly), in the wake of their son committing a terrible crime, but keeps the book’s darting back and forth in time as we come to understand more of the woman, marriage and family that bore a killer.

Words firmly take a back seat in favour of the haunting power of image and sound as Ramsay turns Shriver’s novel into mesmerising and provocative cinema. ‘We Need to Talk about Kevin’ is intense, first-person storytelling as Ramsay and Swinton draw us into the head and world of Eva, just as Ramsay did with Samantha Morton in ‘Morvern Callar’. Yet there’s also a cutting portrait of a family at its heart that makes home life feel like civil war as Ramsay runs with Shriver’s bold ideas about the alienation of parenthood and its devastating effect on love and marriage. Only in its latter stages does the film settle down – a little – into longer scenes and the need to resolve what happened to Kevin. He’s played by a staggeringly creepy Ezra Miller, who inherits the same know-it-all, spooky demeanour of a younger actor, Jasper Newell, earlier in the movie.

The film is at its best in its first hour or so, when it is most daring. The opening sees Eva’s sleeping dream of being carried aloft at a Spanish tomato festival morph into a waking nightmare of her modest house being attacked with red paint. Tomatoes become paint until soon, via ketchup, there are hints of sirens and blood. Sound design is as rigorously and creatively employed: a prisoner’s scream turns into a baby’s cry turns into the wail of a drill.

The film is full of such clever, teasing juxtapositions as thematic links are made between past and present. A distant Christmas for Eva spent in the bosom of her family dissolves to Christmas present and her solitary life as a teen prisoner’s mother and public outcast. We’re never sure whether what we see is the reality of events or Eva’s memory of them. Context is limited and Ramsay’s take on this story is far removed from social commentary or explanation. This is a portrait of a family, channelled through the memories and feelings of the mother herself.

Ramsay challenges even Pedro Almodóvar for an evocative use of red and the look of her film, as shot by Seamus McGarvey, is fragmented, often blurry, close-up, full of detail, preferring to show Eva’s nervous feet as she exits a courthouse  – Swinton is a physically awkward presence throughout – rather than her face. If some of the family scenes feel like a domestic war movie, with subtle talk of competitions and victories (‘Well, you won,’ says Eva to Kevin on the mini-golf course), others feel like a horror movie: a scene in which Eva drives through her area at Halloween is chilling.

‘We Need to Talk about Kevin’ is thought-provoking, confident and fearless. It’s experimental but never alienating and horrific in all the right ways. It’s great to have Ramsay back behind the camera after too long an absence. Bring on the next one.
98

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Release details

Rated:

15

UK release:

Fri Oct 21 2011

Duration:

110 mins

Cast and crew

Director:

Lynne Ramsay

Screenwriter:

Lynne Ramsay

Cast:

Tilda Swinton, John C Reilly, Ezra Miller, Siobhan Fallon

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (60 ratings)
  • This film is thought provoking and also difficult to watch. Acting is great, and is the cinematography. KUDOS to Ms. Swinton!

    Kimberly Leigh Fri Dec 9 2011
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  • Acting very good ; film messy, jumpy, unorganised, superficial!

    Andy Thu Dec 1 2011
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • How I wish Time Out would get its act together and save four and five star ratings for the truly worthy films. FIVE stars should be relinquished (stingily) and only for la creme de la creme of films -- 'unmissable' gems. 'Kevin' was anything but. A pretentious overblown mess. Tilda can make most anything watchable but the film had almost zero depth and resonance and was so saturated with blood red symbolism and portentous music to be borderline ridiculous. So the kid was a bad seed. Period. That's it. Despite the media frenzies of the past, how often has this scenario really happened?? I don't know how many film reviewers Time Out has on its staff but what's becoming obvious is that one may as well flip a coin rather than trust them. The reviews are well-written (usually) and can be fun to read but in future I'll be searching somewhere else when I'm on the lookout for an excellent film.

    Jack1Ace Thu Dec 1 2011
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • I actually posted this on facebook but here you go, I think it's apposite (and btw, reader John Sebastian's comment on this thread about Claire Denis' The Intruder is spot-on): Well, after the ddreary My Week with Marilyn came the superb, unmissable THE ARTIST followed by the brilliant, can't-take-your-eyes-off the-screen-a-pee-will-just-have-to-wait George Clooney/Alexander Payne Hawaiian-set THE DESCENDANTS. But tonight, alas, the seriously underwhelming We Need to Talk About Kevin, which Lynne Ramsay directs with a thumpingly heavy hand - could there be any more wanton over-use of saturated red (think: ketchup, a child's truck, traffic stop lights, copious amounts of strawberry jam, red plastic office chairs, paint, the Valencian tomato festival - yes really) as a persistent visual metaphor for the climactic massacre? Of course, Tilda (lit with lots and lots of red gels) emotes magnificently but only 2 stars for the movie. For post-Columbine flicks, Gus Van Sant's chilling Elephant is the way to go.

    iain hamilton Sun Nov 27 2011
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • I haven’t read the book but found the film very disappointing for two reasons. Reason 1: the first 30 minutes completely give away the ending, so it becomes fairly pointless watching the remaining hour knowing exactly what will happen and hoping for some sort of a twist that never comes. Reason 2: the psychology between the mother and the son is very much scraping the surface. You can tell that there is something deep down there but whatever it is, it’s not properly explored so you end up with this weird predicament of a child-monster without any real reasons to be. That said, the cast is outstanding (we all know Tilda Swindon is an amazing actress anyway but how on earth do you make little boys act this well?!) , the camera work is so good and the sound track is so clever - they make you fall in love with the film. Pity in my case it lasted for the first 30 mins only

    UZ Sun Nov 13 2011
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Pushes the evil son's, well, evilness a little too far in some early scenes (yes, we can see he's a little sh*t - soon to be a big one) to the extent I thought Ramsey had blown it for 5 min, but recovers brilliantly to end up as nothing less than a must see and a richly deserved Oscar nom for Swinton at least 8/10.

    scrumpyjack Sat Nov 12 2011
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • the book was brilliant...the movie missed the point...eva never wanted kevin ...the book is about the psychological effects which are highlighted through kevin's behaviour.. even though she has cared for him all keivn did is tried to get back at her through all his action...it was just a game for him, all to hurt eva. It's all to do with the relationship mother-child and the fact that that he felt unwanted even before he was born...many significant aspect are missing from the movie...whoever enjoyed the movie should read the book.

    tanya Fri Nov 11 2011
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • I feel the need to write a review about kevin. How do Swinton and Reilly manage to have a chinese kid? Why does Swinton keep cleaning the red paint from her house why not move or have done with it and paint her house red? Why does Reillys character force Swinton to thank a fully grown chinese damian for phoning the ambulance when his kid sister is blinded by chemicals whilst he is babysitting, what was he supposed to do? Why does everyone persecute Swintons character when she is one of the biggest victims in the event? If for what ever reason you feel the need to watch a good film on a high school masacre watch Elephant, if you want to watch a film about an evil little kid watch The Omen, if you want to watch a film about the seed of a fat bloke and a neurotic travel agent chimp out with a bow and arrow (not that you actually see this, that might be interesting) look no further.

    jules Wed Nov 9 2011
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • 5 stars for sure

    Masha Wed Nov 9 2011
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Great movie! Bravo! Perhaps the best one I've seen in recent years!

    Masha Wed Nov 9 2011
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