The Roads Not Taken

Movie Information

Strong performances from Javier Barden, Elle Fanning and Laura Linney keep Sally Potter’s flawed experimental drama grounded.
Score:

Genre: Drama
Director: Sally Potter
Starring: Javier Bardem, Elle Fanning, Salma Hayek, Laura Linney
Rated: R

With The Party (2018) and now The Roads Not Taken, writer/director Sally Potter (Orlando) is starting to specialize in brief, theatrical films that attract fairly big-name actors — while ultimately failing to capitalize on the assembled talent.

Her latest experiment stars Javier Bardem as Leo, an immigrant having somewhat of an identity crisis that takes the form of triune 24-hour storylines, representing the main logical paths his life could have taken.

Depicted through often distracting, handheld camerawork, Leo is shown as a stroke-addled man, struggling around New York City with his adult daughter Molly (Elle Fanning) and occasionally babbling about the lost love of his life; as  a married man not wanting to go to Day of the Dead services with his longtime wife, Dolores (Salma Hayek); and as a writer at his favorite Greek seaside bar, talking with a beautiful young woman (Milena Tscharntke) who reminds him of the daughter he left some 20 years earlier.

While the Dolores arc is barely developed until close to the end, when it becomes achingly clear why this part has been obscured, the three sections intersect in interesting ways that keep The Roads Not Taken moving sufficiently well. And even if the narrative is a bit confusing at times, the mystery is strong enough to inspire various theories regarding what’s actually happening, and Potter sustains viewers’ faith that it will all eventually tie together.

Though it’s difficult to see Bardem repetitiously battling his condition in the New York City chapter, the other two strands provide more opportunities for his dramatic gifts to shine. Hayek, Tscharntke and Fanning — the latter genetically believable as the daughter of Bardem and Laura Linney, who plays Leo’s ex-wife Rita — offer reasonably strong support, though Bardem is typically ample on his own and makes the three Leos feel like distinct people.

The performances are especially crucial considering the script’s dorm-room philosophizing, in which Potter suggests that it’s impossible for an artist to have love, parenthood and a career, all balanced and developed to successful degrees. Thanks to these faux profundities, as with her previous (just barely a) feature, The Roads Not Taken plays out more like an interesting film school project from a promising talent than a polished work from an established filmmaker.

Now available to rent from fineartstheatre.com

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About Edwin Arnaudin
Edwin Arnaudin is a staff writer for Mountain Xpress. He also reviews films for ashevillemovies.com and is a member of the Southeastern Film Critics Association (SEFCA) and North Carolina Film Critics Association (NCFCA).

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