Where the Crawdads Sing (10/10)
by Tony Medley
125 minutes
PG-13
Sometimes, too rarely, you see a movie you know
will stay with you forever. The Notebook (2004) was one such.
This movie is another. It grabbed me. From the
outset. I was on the verge of tears throughout the first half hour. As
the film progressed, I just kept getting deeper. And deeper. And more
involved. Unaware of time passing, totally immersed by what I was seeing
on the screen.
Everything about this film screams awards. Jojo
Regina, who brilliantly plays little Kya, the protagonist, as a very
young girl, grabs your heart strings for the first 20 minutes as
six-year-old Kya is abandoned by her entire family except her brutal
father, who eventually disappears, and must learn to live and survive
alone. Then when she matures into a grownup illiterate 19-year-old Kya
(known dismissively to the residents of Barkley Cove as “the Marsh
Girl”), Daisy Edgar-Jones gives a bravura, Oscar®-quality performance as
she carries the rest of the movie.
Filmed in areas around New Orleans, it’s an almost
all-woman production, headed by Producers Reese Witherspoon, Betsy
Danbury, Lauren Neustadter, and John Wu (OK, all aren’t female),
director Olivia Newman, Delia Owens who wrote the best-selling novel and
Lucy Alibar who wrote the screenplay, atmospheric-capturing
cinematographer Polly Morgan, and Production Designer Sue Chan who
created the exceptional tone of the time and place. There were some men,
though. The all-important music is by Mychael Danna, and the film editor
is Alan Edward Bell. I mention them all because they all deserve award
recognition.
The ambience of the area is emphasized because
instead of shooting on a sound stage at a studio, they built Kya’s house
in the swamp and filmed it all there.
The supporting cast includes boyfriends Taylor John
Smith and Harris Dickinson, along with attorney David Strathairn. All
should qualify for nominations for best supporting actor but the one who
stood out for me, slightly above the other two, is Dickinson, who has an
appropriately devious look.
This has something for everyone. It’s a murder
mystery wrapped in a thriller surrounded by romance. What progresses is
believable and heart-wrenching.
I didn’t know anything about The Notebook
when I went to see it and that made it more moving. As a result, I don’t
like writing about great movies because I don’t want to spoil them for
viewers and prefer that they see a movie cold, as I did and make up
their own minds. This is, truly, a movie for all seasons. |