海角大神

海角大神 / Text

'Little Men' is sweet with powerfully understated acting

'Little' stars Theo Taplitz as a young boy living in Brooklyn who befriends a neighbor. A rift between their parents eventually creates a chasm between the two boys as well.

By Peter Rainer , Film critic

鈥淟ittle Men鈥 is a sweet, deceptively slight movie about boyhood聽friendship and parental conflict set against the backdrop of a gentrified聽New York. Director Ira Sachs, who co-wrote with Mauricio Zacharias, has聽a plangent feeling for the small-scale travails of 鈥渙rdinary鈥 people 鈥 who,聽of course, are only ordinary on the surface.

Jake (Theo Taplitz), who is somewhat shy and intellectual, has moved with his聽parents, Brian (Greg Kinnear), a struggling actor, and Kathy (Jennifer聽Ehle), a psychotherapist, from Manhattan to the Brooklyn apartment Brian聽inherited from his grandfather, Max. Leonor (Paulina Garcia), the mother聽of Jake鈥檚 new, extroverted best friend, Tony (Michael Barbieri), runs a聽dress shop in a unit that Max had rented out to her at way below market聽rate. The rift between Leonor and Jake鈥檚 parents, who want to triple the聽rent, eventually creates a chasm between the two boys as well.

Sachs is the filmic equivalent of a good short story writer; he sketches聽in the basics and then lets the moments play out minus a lot of bombast.聽There were times in 鈥淟ittle Men鈥 when I wish he had filled things in a bit聽more 鈥 too often what is intended as spare seemed sparse instead. But he聽has a genuine feeling for his people鈥檚 humanity 鈥 no one here is a villain 鈥撀燼nd the acting is uniformly powerful (and powerfully understated). The聽film grows in retrospect, as I find is often true for me with Sachs鈥 work,聽especially his last film, 鈥淟ove Is Strange.鈥 A director who cares more聽about people than camera moves is a rarity these days. Grade:聽B+ (Rated PG for thematic elements, smoking and some language.)