Page 16 July 15, 2015 The Genius Who Powered the Beach Boys C ONTINUED FROM P AGE 9 KLV \RXQJHU VHOI 7KH ¿OP ZLVHO\ DYRLGV answering the question of how Wilson be- came the lost soul who was wealthy and famous but was not allowed to make the smallest decisions for himself -- yet it pro- vides illuminating glimmers into a story beyond explanation. The challenges of depicting the later Wilson equal those of depicting his youth- ful self. How to portray a lovely woman selling Cadillacs who falls for Wilson in the midst of her confusion and occasion- al alarm over his circumstances? How to make sense of a grown man so damaged and in bondage to a psychologist who controlled his every move? How to depict WKH GLI¿FXOW\ RI H[WUDFWLQJ :LOVRQ IURP such inexplicable peril? The scenes of Wilson’s later life match the early-life scenes in richness and subtle- ty. Cusack paints a believable portrait of a man who is clearly damaged and terri- ¿HG\HWZKRSRVVHVVHVDVRUWRIEHJXLOLQJ genuineness. And Elizabeth Banks pulls PHOTO BY F RANCOIS D UHAMEL /R OADSTAR A TTRACTIONS off a miracle in her portrayal of Ledbetter, -RKQ&XVDFNOHIWDVDQROGHU%ULDQ:LOVRQDQG(OL]DEHWK%DQNVDV0HOLQGD/HGEHWWHULQDVFHQHIURPWKHÀOP¶/RYHDQG0HUF\· who grew to love Wilson under such trying circumstances. Her tenderness and cour- age make a remarkable kind of sense -- I was genuinely stunned by the authenticity of their interactions. Their scenes togeth- er resonate with emotional intelligence; almost everything remains unsaid, unbur- dened by the usual movie exposition that kills most depictions of genuine love. Paul Giamatti likewise does chilling work as Landy, which was yet anoth- er kind of challenge. Because people as GHVWUXFWLYH DV /DQG\ DUH VR GLI¿FXOW WR XQGHUVWDQG PRVW ¿OPV VHWWOH IRU FDUWRRQ villains that would never materialize in real life. Yet the elements of Landy’s hold over Wilson make real emotional sense here. I was not surprised to read later that both Wilson and his wife have remarked that their real life experiences were much ZRUVHWKDQLQWKH¿OPWKH¿OPFRQYLQFHV in part by not overplaying its hand. What emerges resonates beyond Wil- son’s own story. The two parts of his life depicted here happen to contrast two eras of the California dream -- the relative op- timism of the 60s, embodied by boys in- ventively crooning about waves only one of them had any experience cresting, and a later period when the drive to cash in on the dream seems more tawdry and even dangerous. Pohlad, who has made his career pro- GXFLQJDQLPSUHVVLYHOLVWRI¿OPVLQFOXG- ing “12 Years a Slave” and “The Tree of Life”), establishes himself as an unusually subtle director. He has elicited a portrait of a soul who, though clearly damaged and burdened by the gifts entrusted to his care, turns out to be remarkably and mysterious- ly resilient. And this wise and beautiful ¿OPVSDUNVORYHDQGPHUF\IRUDQXQNQRZ- able person, and sends you back to his mu- sic for more of the secrets hidden there. Darleen Ortega is a judge on the Ore- JRQ &RXUW RI$SSHDOV DQG WKH ¿UVW ZRP- an of color to serve in that capacity. Her movie review column Opinionated Judge appears regularly in The Portland Ob- server. Find her movie blog at opinionat- edjudge.blogspot.com.