***½/**** Image A Sound A Extras C
starring Michael Shannon, Joel Edgerton, Kirsten Dunst, Sam Shepard
written and directed by Jeff Nichols
by Walter Chaw Jeff Nichols’s Midnight Special is beautiful. It’s a film about aspiration and sacrifice. It believes that the world is still a mysterious place anchored by love and hope and devotion to simple ideas about how hard it is to be a parent–and how important. It’s about nurturing a thing with all your heart and letting it go when it’s strong enough. It’s about listening when it’s the last thing you want to hear; it’s about believing there’s a future for your kids even if all evidence seems to suggest the opposite. It’s like Tomorrowland in many ways, but mostly in its suggestion that there’s a place maybe where things feel like they used to feel when you were a kid and everything was still possible. Even though nothing made sense, things would make sense one day when you were big. Midnight Special deserves its comparisons to films like E.T. and Starman and especially Close Encounters of the Third Kind. It works in the same small places with ordinary characters who grow to fill larger, echoing spaces. Nichols puts us in medias res with Roy (Michael Shannon) and his best friend Lucas (Joel Edgerton) on the run from cult leader Calvin Meyer (Sam Shepard), having fled at some point before the movie starts with Roy’s son, Alton (Jaeden Lieberher). We learn it was around Alton’s oddities that the cult largely formed. We learn that Alton’s oddities are perhaps supernatural, or extraterrestrial, or interdimensional. It doesn’t really matter. They’re profoundly strange, and there are times it appears that he’s able to tell a little of the future.
The Authorities get involved, and like in most of these films, there’s a particular Man in Black who is empathetic with the Other. This one is Paul Sevier (Adam Driver), who carries a thick file and a clipboard and pronounces his name with careful zeal, as if he knows he’s in a delicious film as its most delicious character. Paul wants to know how it is that Alton can intercept secret satellite transmissions, and what a particular date and set of coordinates means, and why Alton and Roy want so desperately to get there on time. Midnight Special is about a lot of big, adventure-movie things, but mostly it’s about relationships and faith. Nichols talks about these two things repeatedly in his work. In Mud, his most acclaimed film, two boys develop a friendship with a guy living in a boat in a tree, and in Shotgun Stories, his directorial debut, literal and figurative scars define a roadmap between three warring brothers. Midnight Special‘s closest analogue, however, is Nichol’s second film, Take Shelter, which finds muse Shannon in an agitated state, possessed of terrible knowledge and saddled with the responsibility to hold true when his family questions his sanity. Faith and relationships, the two strongest ties that bind: neither possible without the other. The method to Nichols’s magic is that he isn’t content to test these bonds in controlled environments. Midnight Special and Take Shelter, my two favourites of his, winnow the chaff with elements of the supernatural.
Nichols’s narrative structures remind of the insular peculiarities of Flannery O’Connor or the provincial mythologies of William Faulkner; all of his films exist in the same “county.” All of them draw from the same well of images. In each, there’s a moment when a character will look up at the sky as though they’re seeing it for the first time. He’s cited Mark Twain as a primary influence, but I don’t see the same kind of self-consciousness in Nichols’s work. He’s deeply involved in the creation of a new Southern epic. Midnight Special is essentially a road movie–maybe a Sugarland Express? It inspires comparisons not because it’s derivative, but because it’s difficult to place exactly how his movies make you feel without referencing other movies that made you feel the same way. Roy and Lucas and Alton travel by night because it’s dangerous for Alton to be in daylight. Eventually they meet up with Alton’s mother, Sarah (Kirsten Dunst, incredibly warm), and then, in one of the film’s few, cannily-utilized special-effects sequences, Alton can be in the sun again, and his needs become more urgent. But it’s not about all that. It’s about the moment where Roy meets Alton’s eye before he leaves to do something dangerous and brave: Everything goes unspoken there because nothing a father can say to his boy at terminal junctures can define the weight of the moment. Alton shares a glance with his mother, too. Midnight Special is a declaration at once that there are ties eternal, however brief, and a place where sacrifice isn’t sacrifice–and where everything is still possible. Originally published: April 15, 2016.
THE BLU-RAY DISC
by Bill Chambers For something photographed in 35mm Panavision, Midnight Special‘s 2.38:1, 1080p Blu-ray transfer does look conspicuously clean, but ‘scope photography tends to de-emphasize film grain, anyway (plus it’s common for denoising to be part of the DI process now), and the naturalistic exposures betray the celluloid origin of the image. DP Adam Stone has shot Jeff Nichols’s last three films, including this one, using the latest generation of anamorphic lenses (the G-series), which produce the desired horizontal flares while downplaying other artifacts historically associated with Panavision, such as soft focus and focal distortions. Midnight Special may be a throwback to an earlier era of filmmaking, but it doesn’t eschew all innovation in some laboured attempt at artistic purity. For its part, this HD presentation has impossibly inky blacks, crisp detail, and vivid colouring within a cyan-heavy palette. The attendant 5.1 DTS-HD MA track is notable for a particular cue of David Wingo’s score that keeps jabbing the viewer with bass so deep it could break up kidney stones. A dialogue-driven mix that catches you off guard when it flexes its muscles (a meteor shower, a mid-film jump-scare of sorts), it sounds great at home.
A bunch of HiDef vignettes append the feature, with five of them (“Roy,” “Lucas,” “Sarah,” “Alton,” “Sevier”) falling under the umbrella heading “Origins” (13 mins. in total). These are an uneasy mix of insights into both the characters and the actors playing them; Nichols and a small sampling of the cast (mainly Kirsten Dunst and Jaeden Lieberher) articulate or speculate on a lot of the movie’s backstory, while Dunst and Lieberher delve a little into their mentor-mentee relationship as former and current child stars, respectively. In the more conventional “The Unseen World” (13 mins.), Nichols talks about the story’s seeds in his newborn son suffering a febrile seizure, and he and producer Sarah Green get into Alex McDowell’s uncredited production design of Midnight Special‘s very own Tomorrowland. The disc comes with an Ultraviolet download code for the film and cues up with the usual studio ephemera.
112 minutes; PG-13; 2.38:1 (1080p/MPEG-4); English 5.1 DTS-HD MA, English DVS 5.1, French DD 5.1, Spanish DD 5.1; English, English SDH, French, Spanish subtitles; BD-50; Region-free; Warner