Skip to main content
film review

Rust and Bone, directed by Jacques Audiard

If you're fond of elevated melodrama, then pencil this one in. By turns brutal and tender, the plot is a bullet train that refuses to derail. Suiting up for the demi-monde is Ali: single father, petty thief, back-alley boxer and soon the burly half of a star-crossed romance. From the other side of the tracks hails Stephanie (Marion Cotillard), a trainer at a SeaWorld-style aquarium until a whale goes killer, reshaping her anatomy and her psyche in one chomp. Their ensuing relationship and complications demand, like all melodrama, a major suspension of disbelief. So bring along a crane, but know that both the cast and director Jacques Audiard do some impressive hefting themselves. The principals deliver a matched set of raw performances while the direction, like the script, moves shamelessly from stark to lyrical and back again. That's quite the agenda – no one could possibly accuse this picture of idleness.

Sept. 29, 6:30 pm Granville 7; Oct. 6, 3:15 pm Granville 7

Interact with The Globe