Current:Home > Finance'Showing Up' is a rare glimpse of an artist at (very hard) work-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
'Showing Up' is a rare glimpse of an artist at (very hard) work
View Date:2025-01-11 10:21:59
Showing Up is the fourth movie that Kelly Reichardt and Michelle Williams have made together, and I hope there are many more to come. Their collaboration has given us some of Williams' most quietly memorable characters: a young drifter living out of her car in Wendy and Lucy, or a 19th-century pioneer heading west along the Oregon Trail in Meek's Cutoff.
Showing Up is a lighter, funnier piece of work; it's pretty much the first Reichardt movie that could be described as a comedy. But like all her films, it's a model of indie realism, made with a level of rigorous observation and rueful insight you rarely see in American movies.
Williams plays Lizzy, an introverted sculptor in Portland, Ore., who makes clay figures of women. She has a local show of her work coming up, and she's racing to finish her sculptures in time. But the universe isn't making it easy for her. She works full-time in the office at an art college, where her boss is none other than her mom, who, like almost everyone else, doesn't take Lizzy's creative pursuits too seriously. And so Lizzy has to do her sculpting in her spare time, in the apartment she rents out from her friend Jo, terrifically played by Hong Chau.
Jo is also an artist, and a more successful one: Her elaborate mixed-media installations have all the wow factor that Lizzy's lovely but modest sculptures don't. It only adds to the tension that Jo isn't the most attentive landlord.
Reichardt and her co-writer, Jon Raymond, perfectly nail the passive-aggressive vibe of Lizzy and Jo's relationship without overdoing it. There's real nuance to both characters: You can understand why Lizzy resents Jo's flakiness, and you can also see why Jo doesn't go out of her way for someone as frosty as Lizzy.
Things get a little more complicated — but also more poignant — when Jo rescues a wounded pigeon in their yard, and she and Lizzy take turns nursing it back to health. This isn't the first time Reichardt has given an animal a prominent role in her movies, as she did in Wendy and Lucy and First Cow. And we learn something about Lizzy from the careful, attentive way she looks after the bird, even while juggling her deadlines — namely, that she's used to making sacrifices for the sake of others.
Lizzy spends a fair amount of time checking in on her artist brother, who has mental health issues and who's treated by their mom as the tortured genius of the family. She also mediates tensions between her parents, who are divorced; her dad is a retired potter who's going through something of a late-in-life crisis. He's played by Judd Hirsch, who, as it happens, played the uncle of Williams' character in Steven Spielberg's recent The Fabelmans.
That movie would make a great double bill with this one. Williams' two characters could hardly be more different, but in each movie she plays a woman who essentially puts her art on hold for her family's sake. The fact that most of her family members in Showing Up are also steeped in the art world doesn't make as much of a difference as you might think.
Reichardt's movie is all about the challenge of finding the time, the space, the money and the energy to pursue your calling. It's also about how making art can be both a joy and incredibly hard work. Lizzy's story is interspersed with almost documentary-like sequences of the art college where she works; we see students painting, weaving, dancing and building installations. There's a nicely personal feel to these moments, informed by Reichardt's own years teaching at Bard College and other schools. But she lingers most of all in the scenes of Lizzy finally getting some time to herself at her workbench, molding her clay, setting her figures aside to dry and then filling in the details with paint.
Watching Lizzy lose herself in her craft for minutes on end, I was reminded of just how rarely the movies show us, really show us, an artist at work. We get a lot of biopics about creative geniuses, but nothing like the richness of texture and insight that Reichardt gives us. It hardly matters that Lizzy may not be destined for fame, because you believe in her and her work at every moment. She's a wondrous creation, and so is this movie.
veryGood! (6377)
Related
- Demure? Brain rot? Oxford announces shortlist for 2024 Word of the Year: Cast your vote
- FTC to refund $1.25 million to those tricked by LASIK surgery chain. Here's how to file a claim
- Master All Four Elements With This Avatar: The Last Airbender Gift Guide
- Doctors didn't think much of her constant cough. A nurse did and changed her life
- Burt Bacharach, composer of classic songs, will have papers donated to Library of Congress
- California’s Oil Country Hopes Carbon Management Will Provide Jobs. It May Be Disappointed
- Attrition vs. tradition: After heavy losses, Tampa Bay Rays hope to defy odds yet again
- Movie Review: ‘Dune: Part Two’ sustains the dystopian dream of ‘Part One’
- Patricia Heaton criticizes media, 'extremists' she says 'fear-mongered' in 2024 election
- Tennessee free-market group sues over federal rule that tightens worker classification standards
Ranking
- The results are in: Peanut the Squirrel did not have rabies, county official says
- Ye spotted wearing full face mask in Italy with Bianca Censori, Ty Dolla $ign: See the photos
- West Virginia House OKs bill to allow teachers with training to carry guns, other weapons in schools
- Charges dropped against Florida family accused of attacking gay man in relationship with adult son
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Mixed Use
- Red states that have resisted Medicaid expansion are feeling pressure to give up.
- Agency to announce the suspected cause of a 2022 bridge collapse over a Pittsburgh ravine
- Mom arrested after Instagram post about 5-year-old daughter helping wax adult clients
Recommendation
-
Here's Your First Look at The White Lotus Season 3 With Blackpink’s Lisa and More Stars
-
The minty past and cloudy future of menthol cigarettes
-
Customers sue Stanley, say the company failed to disclose presence of lead in tumblers
-
Barry Keoghan gets naked for Vanity Fair Hollywood cover issue, talks 'Saltburn' dance
-
'Heretic' spoilers! Hugh Grant spills on his horror villain's fears and fate
-
How Alabama's ruling that frozen embryos are 'children' could impact IVF
-
West Virginia bill allowing librarians to be prosecuted over 'obscene' books moves forward
-
Man suspected of bludgeoning NYC woman to death accused of assaults in Arizona