“Mommy” is an explosive French Canadian film about a mother-son relationship. [...] looking at it, I thought the image was taller than it was wide, but in any case it’s quite different from all other movies, which are invariably more wide than tall. The obvious effect is a feeling of compression. Director Xavier Dolan tunnels the viewer into the action in a tight, constricted way that feels right for the movie and for the strained emotions of the characters. Every human face is longer than it is wide, and so is almost every portrait in a museum. Instead of showing just the face, with some irrelevant or blurred background happening to the side, Dolan’s close-ups give you the bottom of the neck to the top of the head, and nothing else. Anne Dorval plays Diane, a widow in her 40s who, at the start of the movie, is retrieving her son from a mental hospital. Sitting in an administrator’s office, Diane, a flashy character in her own right, hears over the walkie-talkie the voice of her son cursing at his guards, and a smile crosses her face. For the rest of the movie, viewers ask themselves what they would do, and they keep asking, each time young Steve (Antoine-Olivier Pilon) flies out of control. Dorval gets a broad and punishing emotional workout in “Mommy,” and she’s brilliant, but don’t lose track of Pilon, who is so singular and bizarre as Steve that one could easily forget that he’s acting.

 

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