Every Thing Will be Fine review

Every Thing Will Be Fine has German filmmaker Wim Wenders returning to the big screen.


His film is imbued with Wenders’s stylistic trademark and is technically brilliant, but unfortunately it will succeed only in inducing a state of tedium. This arthouse offering, with a screenplay by Norwegian Bjorn Olaf Johannessen, is far too laboured and lumbering for comfort – a melodrama that stretches over a 10-year period and occupies a running time of almost two hours.

The renowned director could easily have pruned his production and not lost the gist of what he had to say – if anything. And, despite the novel use of 3D, the film still doesn’t quite rise to the occasion. In one scene Kate (Charlotte Gainsbourg) says: “We can only try to believe that there’s meaning to this” – and we can only agree.

Every Thing Will Be Fine is a protracted study in grief and forgiveness, with James Franco imprisoned in a role that is emotionally stuntedOne day while driving in a blizzard, his character Tomas runs over the young son of illustrator and single mother Kate, but manages to save the boy’s older brother, Christopher (Jack Fulton).

Kate, a melancholic, God-fearing soul, is distraught but ultimately bears her son’s accidental killer no ill will; Tomas, on the other hand, has difficulty forgiving himself. He leaves his girlfriend Sara (Rachel McAdams) and goes into a psychological tailspin that culminates in a suicide attempt.

The film then spans a decade of emotional catharsis and self-confrontation, with the story dropping in on Tomas every few years to check if everything is fine yet. Tomas eventually moves into a relationship with publishing assistant, Anna (Marie-Josee Croze), whom he marries and adopts her daughter. Over time he also becomes a highly successful author.

Meanwhile, Christopher (Robert Naylor), now a malevolent teenager, who had idolised Tomas through reading his many books, requests a meeting. He is carrying baggage and also has to work through his own grief and anger.

Set in a snowy, cold Canada, Every Thing Will Be Fine is visually attractive but it suffers badly from a stiff, humourless script, which only scratches the surface and never allows the audience to truly connect with its characters.

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