The Souvenir
— Critics love this film and it is very good, but somewhat unpleasant too. It’s two hours of Julie’s relationship with Anthony unfolding and deteriorating over time, presented in that manner where various scenes are depicted, each giving a clue to the personalities involved, letting the truth of their relationship come into sharper focus with each succeeding scene. As a viewer, you feel detached because you know you’re just observing a moment in time, but it’s hard not to feel voyeuristic too, as though you’re watching moments so personal, they shouldn’t have had any witnesses. As the relationship evolves, it becomes one of drug dependency and codependency, with Julie ignoring and maybe denying Anthony’s addiction as long as she can, pulling away from her friends and studies. In the end the tale exists firmly in the past, having been part of Julies’ evolution, but the intimate memories linger. The film was a little long and oddly dull, but it probably needed to be slow-moving and somewhat murky. I liked it but I don’t think I enjoyed it. Honor Swinton Byrne is fantastic as Julie, obviously getting some of her wonderful mother’s talent—and Tilda Swinton plays her mother in the film.
[2019. 120 min. Written and directed by Joanna Hogg. Starring Honor Swinton Byrne, Tom Burke, and Tilda Swinton.]
https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-souvenir-2019