MOVIES PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE Thursday, april 22, 2021 • ThE BullETiN ‘The Father’ tells a gripping tale of aging BY MAKENZIE WHITTLE • The Bulletin “T he Father” is one of those beautiful films that captures the heartbreaking reality of a situation so well that you will probably never want to watch it again. Based on director Florian Zeller’s stage play “La Père” and adapted by Zeller and Christopher Hampton, the film follows a man in his late 80s named Anthony (Anthony Hopkins) as his mind Sony Pictures Classics deteriorates from dementia. Olivia Coleman and Anthony Hopkins in a scene from “The Father” (2020). POUR OVER all the latest Brew news at NDDRINKS IFESTYLE/FOODA /L M CO N. TI LE UL WWW.BENDB Celebrating a Decade on the Deschutes www.gregsgrill.com 395 SW Powerhouse Drive 541-382-2200 Advertise on this page for as little as $25 A WEEK • 541-383-0303 We see the world through Anthony’s eyes, the heartbreaking confusion associated with the disease, we see his daughter, Anne, ap- pear as Olivia Coleman then as Olivia Wil- liams and back again, we see scenes take place out of order so the viewer is fully im- mersed in the way his mind is working. The film starts with a visit from his daughter who brings him his groceries and checks in on him after he has berated his home care worker and accused her of steal- ing his watch. She then happily tells him of her plans to move to Paris with a French- man she met. Then Anne is suddenly gone, and we see Paul (Mark Gatiss), Anne’s husband, whom Anthony doesn’t recognize, and we are met with the idea that this may not be Antho- ny’s flat. It’s not until about 20 minutes in that we see some semblance of linear storytelling when we focus on Anne for a moment. Anthony awakens one morning to find the flat’s layout has changed around him. Anne interviews another caregiver, Laura (Imogen Poots), whom her father charms with dripping charisma before changing on a dime to a more cruel and petty demeanor, leaving Anne in tears. We then shift back into Anthony’s per- spective as he relives previous scenes, this time with the real Anne and Paul. We see jumps in time and place, and we are con- stantly pulled alongside him as pieces of his More Information “The Father” 97 minutes Rated PG-13 for some strong language and thematic material. Hopkins delivers a career best in a lifetime of remarkable roles, and Coleman wears every emotion — grief, annoyance, exhaustion, guilt and overall sadness — on her face, often all at the same time. You recognize everything immediately. mind are slowly lost to the disease. If you have had any kind of connection to watching loved one slowly lose themselves to dementia, it is hard to watch it unfold on screen in any capacity. What “The Father” does, and does extremely well, is tell its story through the mind of the person losing it. Ed- iting scenes together in such a way to create a Continued on next page