Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Nomadland

The movie Nomadland won top honors at both TIFF and the Venice Film Festival last year and it is currently generating a lot of Oscar buzz so it has been on my must see list for quite a while.  It is now playing in IMAX theaters for a limited engagement (it will get a wider release and begin streaming on Hulu on February 19) so I went to see it yesterday.  After her husband dies and the US Gypsum plant where she has worked for many years closes down, Fern (Frances McDormand) is forced to put all of her belongings in storage and live in her van while working a seasonal job at an Amazon fulfillment center.  There she meets a woman named Linda who travels all over the U.S. in a van while working seasonal jobs and she invites her to a gathering of like-minded people in the desert.  She turns her down but when the weather gets too cold to live in her van she finds the group.  She meets other nomads who teach her basic survival skills and extol the virtues of this lifestyle.  She decides to travel through the Western states to accumulate as many memories as she can while working jobs such as a camp host at an RV park, a cook at Wall Drug, and a laborer on a beet farm.  She frequently encounters a man named Dave (David Strathairn) on her travels and they form a close friendship.  Both Dave, after deciding to move in with his son, and her sister encourage her to settle down with them but she ultimately decides that she likes the freedom of the road.  This is an incredibly powerful character study that is told very slowly through a series of vignettes which illustrate both the joys and the hardships of this lifestyle.  Just as she did with her previous film The Rider (which I loved), director Chloe Zhao has real people play fictionalized versions of themselves and this lends a certain credibility to the narrative.  McDormand gives a quietly affecting performance and I especially loved the scenes where she is overcome by nature.  The cinematography is simultaneously beautiful with wide shots of the landscape as Fern travels and gritty in the accurate portrayal of her circumstances.  I really loved this movie because, while Fern is forced into this lifestyle because of the Great Recession, there is something enchanting about giving everything away and leaving society behind to live more authentically.  I highly recommend it!

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