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Film

Film review:Beautiful Boy

This poignant family drama is flawed, says Linda Marric

January 17, 2019 11:54
Steve Carell and Timothee Chalamet in Beautiful Boy
1 min read

Steve Carell and Timothée Chalamet star as father and son in Felix van Groeningen’s poignant new family drama Beautiful Boy, based on two memoirs, one written by Jewish American writer David Sheff and the other by his son Nic. The film charts the father’s struggle to understand what motivates his son’s reckless actions which lead to meth addiction.

New York Times contributor David (Carell) finds himself at a loss when his teenage son Nic (Chalamet) starts experiencing with hard drugs. Having always had a deep connection with the boy, David can no longer recognise the son he loves “more than anything in the world” as the young man’s life slowly descends into a vicious circle of addiction, recovery and relapse.

Unwilling to sit back and watch helplessly while Nic destroys his life, David looks into the science behind addiction in the hope of better understanding what his son is going through. Eventually, inevitably, he realises that you can only ever help someone if they’re willing to help themselves first.

Van Groeningen has made a deeply moving film. Unfortunately, it is marred by a glossy look which jars with the content; and a needlessly meandering screenplay. At times, Beautiful Boy also suffers from its decision to stick, perhaps too rigidly, to the father-son dynamic of the original source material whilst relegating its female characters, particularly Nic’s mother (Amy Ryan) and step-mother (Maura Tierney), to mere onlooker status.