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Kidman and Leigh sparkle in ‘Margot at the Wedding’

 


Nicole Kidman and Jennifer Jason Leigh in “Margot at the Wedding”
CREDIT: Ken Regan

“MARGOT AT THE WEDDING”
Nicole Kidman, Jack Black, Jennifer Jason Leigh
Directed by
Rated R
Regal Tara 4 Cinemas

Director Noah Baumbach’s script for “Margot at the Wedding” plays like an adaptation of the glossary of a psychology textbook, with assorted quirks randomly allocated to various characters. It’s a big comedown for the creator of “The Squid and the Whale,” one of 2005’s best films. Nicole Kidman and Jennifer Jason Leigh are terrific as rivalrous siblings, but their numerous neuroses seem more like acting exercises than plot points.

Pauline (Leigh) is marrying Malcolm (Jack Black), an unemployed artist-musician whose fear of rejection keeps him from putting his work in the marketplace. After years of estrangement Margot (Kidman) opts to attend the wedding and mend fences. She brings along her androgynous adolescent son, Claude (Zane Pais), who’s around the same age as Pauline’s daughter, Ingrid (Flora Cross).

The sisters fall into their old patterns. Margot, a successful author, is bossy and hypercritical, particularly of Pauline’s fiancé. Pauline reaches out in love and has her confidences betrayed, even though Margot loves her too, in her way. Once Margot learns Pauline is having Malcolm’s baby everyone, including Malcolm, soon knows.
Most of the dialogue sounds natural enough to be improvised. Black has some serious moments, but is largely there for comic relief.

Some critics have found “Margot at the Wedding” a devastating satire of the idle rich. It may have had that potential, but in its present, scattershot form, the film is nothing more than a showcase for two gifted actresses (full disclosure: Leigh is the filmmaker’s wife) and a collection of ideas waiting to be organized into a coherent screenplay. TWO STARS—Steve Warren

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