Take This Waltz

Take This Waltz

Directed by Sarah Polley
Starring: Michelle Williams, Luke Kirby, Seth Rogen

Grade: B+

Let’s face it, character studies do not make good popcorn movies. They don’t tend to be terribly exciting and they’re not particularly funny either. Long stretches of quiet drag out followed by moments where you have to rush for the control to turn the volume down because you’re suddenly completely started by the noise, thus spilling greasy popcorn all over your new ironically phrased T-shirt you just scored from the Salvation Army. What these kind of movies do though, at least the good ones, is find a tense note and push it all the way to the brink until you can’t stand it any longer. Take This Waltz, directed by Sarah Polley, uses sexual tension to this effect, and does it well. The meat of the film revolves around an emotional extramarital affair in which the two characters use every ounce of restraint they possess to not physically touch each other, though it’s clear that symbolically the deed is already done. The tension these two feel is so palpable it becomes too much for the audience to stand, much less the two characters on screen.

The film centers around Margot (Michelle Williams) who has a good marriage in seemingly every facet except for a lack of sex. I wouldn’t even say there is a lack of intimacy, because Margot and her husband Lou (Seth Rogen in a rare dramatic turn) are very affectionate in a quirky, demented way. But the lack of action between the sheets is all too apparent and every attempt at rectifying that ends in failure and resentment on both parts. Enter dreamy Daniel (Luke Kirby). He’s everything Lou is not: cynical, mysterious and far better looking. Margot meets Daniel on a trip to Toronto, shares a plane with him and they are both surprised to learn he lives virtually right across the street from her. Convenient, yes, but the film is good enough to overlook this impracticality. The two begin having secret rendezvous where they flirt and even talk bluntly about all the sex they would have if she wasn’t married, but they never act on it. Lou meets Daniel and likes him. He invites him over to their house for a party. He pieces together what’s been happening eventually but is far too nice of a guy to have the explosion moment we’re used to getting in these kinds of movies, instead he backs off. Lou is not willing to fight for her, and Daniel is. Maybe that’s the message here, but it’s a lot more complicated than that.

Michelle Williams is fast becoming one of the best young actresses working right now. People who only remember her as the girl from Dawson’s Creek are doing themselves a disservice. She turns in an amazing performance in this movie as a character so full of angst, toward just about everything in this world, that she has to work up courage in order to seduce her own husband. Seth Rogen, meanwhile, definitely has limits. He’s an incredibly funny man and plays a great everyman. Most of this movie requires him to simply a sweeter version of the same character he usually plays, but when the script calls for him to do some heavy lifting, Williams is acting circles around him. Luke Kirby is good in his thankless role. It’s thankless because it’s virtually impossible not to dislike this guy. He’s a decent enough guy going through his own moral quandaries, but the fact that he’s leading Margot away from Lou, who’s just so fucking nice, makes us resent him.

A standout performance comes from Sarah Silverman. She only shows up in a few scenes, probably a good thing. A recovering alcoholic, she dreads the inevitable relapse that always seems to come to the afflicted, and provides virtually all the insight in the film. She sort of serves as the voice of the audience in some ways as she spells out the subtleties that we might not have picked up on. “New things get old,” she tells Margo at one point. It’s fairly early in the movie, but by the end we realize this is probably the most important piece of dialogue. It might seem heavy handed but the rest of the film plays it so close to the vest that it’s nice to have something concrete to latch onto.

Overall this is not a story interested in satisfying conclusions. It’s also not a love story, not really. It’s about unsatisfied lives and trying to find happiness wherever you can.

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2 thoughts on “Take This Waltz

  1. I can’t believe we actually agree on something movie related– and that this is the movie! I thought Michelle Williams and Sarah Silverman were fantastic in this– their acting and their characters. Seth Rogan and Luke Kirby were both awful. I wish the director had found a way to make the male characters more like shadows and not developed characters since the movie was not really about them at all.

  2. Totally. Especially because the male characters are each designated with one personality trait. One’s really nice, and one’s sort of mysterious. Though Luke Kirby at least has the benefit of having really dreamy eyes.

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