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    Home » Review: Director Lukas Dhont’s “Close”

    Review: Director Lukas Dhont’s “Close”

    By SHOOTThursday, January 26, 2023Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1560 Views
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    This image released by A24 shows Eden Dambrine, foreground right, in a scene from "Close." (A24 via AP)

    By Lindsey Bahr

    --

    "Close" is a crushing story of grief told with grace by Belgian director Lukas Dhont. At its heart is a friendship, loving and deep, between two 13-year-old boys, Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele), in the countryside.

    It is summertime when we meet them, playing and dreaming and out of breath running through fields of colorful flowers and biking on idyllic dirt roads. They are affectionate and sweet. At their frequent sleepovers, Leo delicately blows on Remi's neck before they close their eyes. He watches Remi with pure adoration as he practices the oboe. One imagines they are not too far away from being more physical with one another, but for now, it's just pure intimacy.

    It's a beautiful and confusing and sometimes embarrassing moment of life and friendship that girls know all too well, but rarely is this sort of pre-sexual intimacy depicted with boys on screen. By 13, at least in past generations, many boys have already been societally shamed out of such public displays of tenderness with their own gender.

    Leo and Remi's peaceful, private summer comes to an end when school starts and their classmates immediately single out the pair for their closeness. They aren't ashamed at first but soon become aware of the gaze of others who want answers. Some girls ask if they're together. Leo says no, they're just like brothers. And the boys notice too, and soon Leo is angry and decides to distance himself from Remi. He starts playing sports and making new friends. And one morning he doesn't wait for him to ride bikes to school together. These sort of slights and subtle changes are the stuff of tragedy for any young person.

    But then something very big happens. Stop reading if you'd rather not know.

    It's not hard to guess what that is with a score that is melancholic and wistful long before (it's also in the ratings guidelines). There may be some who consider it a spoiler, but this is not something I would want anyone to be surprised by, especially not those who've experienced this kind of loss themselves.

    For Leo, it both comes out of nowhere and also not. He and his classmates go on a school trip one day and arrive back at school to find all their parents waiting for them. Leo doesn't even want to get off the bus. His mother (Léa Drucker) has to come on to retrieve him and tell him what happened. Both Drucker and Émilie Dequenne, as Remi's mother, deliver beautiful, heartbreaking supporting performances. But the film belongs to the magnetic Dambrine, who is both perfectly his age and disarmingly wise.

    Many directors and writers might choose to end their stories here, but Dhont places this moment right in the middle of his film, daring to show the uncomfortable aftermath and grief of a 13-year-old worried it's his fault and missing his friend.

    If there is a criticism to be made of "Close" it's that we don't get to know Remi all that well before he's gone. Leo is the more talkative one. Remi is quiet and contemplative. He'll show up to Leo's hockey practice and follow Leo along the plastic divider. It makes for a beautiful shot and drills in the awkwardness that Leo feels in the moment, but it's also not something I believed. The same effect could have been achieved by having him simply sit in the stands instead of making him do something so strange.

    It's interesting that "Close" has been rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association. This is certainly not anything the filmmaker has any say over, but this is also the type of film that younger people should see. Bullying and suicide and accidental cruelty happen in middle schools, and "Close" is at least partially about the danger of not being able to talk about what you're feeling when you're feeling it.

    "Close," an A24 release in theaters Friday, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for, "thematic material, suicide, brief strong language." Running time: 105 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

    Lindsey Bahr is an AP film writer

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    Category:Features
    Tags:A24CloseLukas Dhont



    Movie Armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed Completes Prison Sentence In Fatal “Rust” Set Shooting

    Saturday, May 24, 2025

    A movie armorer convicted in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer by Alec Baldwin on the set of the Western movie "Rust" was released from a New Mexico prison on Friday after completing an 18-month sentence.

    Prison records show Hannah Gutierrez-Reed signed out of the Western New Mexico Correctional Facility in Grants to return home to Bullhead City, Arizona, on parole related to her involuntary manslaughter conviction in the death of Halyna Hutchins in 2021.

    Gutierrez-Reed also is being supervised under terms of probation after pleading guilty to a separate charge of unlawfully carrying a gun into a licensed liquor establishment.

    Baldwin, the lead actor and coproducer for "Rust," was pointing a gun at Hutchins during a rehearsal on a movie set outside Santa Fe when the revolver went off, killing Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza.

    A jury convicted Gutierrez-Reed of involuntary manslaughter in March 2024. Gutierrez-Reed has an appeal of the conviction pending in a higher court. Jurors acquitted her of allegations she tampered with evidence in the "Rust" investigation.

    Prosecutors blamed Gutierrez-Reed for unwittingly bringing live ammunition onto the set of "Rust" and for failing to follow basic gun safety protocols.

    Gutierrez-Reed carried a gun into a downtown Santa Fe bar where firearms are prohibited weeks before "Rust" began filming.

    The terms of parole include mental health assessments and a prohibition on firearms ownership and possession.

    An involuntary manslaughter charge against Baldwin was dismissed at trial last year on allegations that police and prosecutors withheld evidence from the defense.

    The filming of "Rust" was completed in Montana. The Western was released in theaters this... Read More

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