Film Reviews
Puzzle

Puzzles are what children do to learn eye/hand coordination. But when Agnes receives a puzzle for her birthday, she is drawn to it, filings to magnet. She is a housewife for a festering man-child, who works in a garage and expects his dinner on the table. 

Imagine his surprise when he finds a puzzle on it instead. 

Agnes takes to puzzle pounding with genius ease. She is so drawn to that puzzle that she calls the giver to find the store. That means she has to explore Manhattan, an exotic and scary thought, but she does it. She also answers an ad placed on the bulletin board by a man looking for a puzzling partner, and that's how she finds out about puzzling competitions.

Even more exotic than Manhattan is this man, Robert. He lives in uncluttered luxury, even his brick walls are opalescent. He immediately notes Agnes' quickness, her focus, her smallness and courts her, this naif entering his foreign world. She is much better at finding the missing pieces of the jigsaw puzzle than of her life, but she does begin to realize a few things under Robert's hands-on tutelage. Best of all, she sticks to her own style of puzzling.

Kelly Macdonald plays Agnes with all the fine intelligence she's brought to roles in "Goodbye, Christopher Robin" and the transcendent "The Girl in the Café." She assumes the role of Agnes and wears it with panache. The well-known Indian actor Irrfan Khan, so good in "The Lunchbox" and "The Life of Pi," makes Robert romantic. David Denman deserves credit for making Agnes' husband interesting beyond the cliché.

Dustin O'Halloran's music supports the film brilliantly, and Chris Noor's cinematography, especially in Grand Central Station, addresses the exotic. Polly Mann and the actor Oren Moverman wrote the script based on a 2009 Argentinian film. Each crew member serves as able lieutenant to director Marc Turtletaub, who also directed "Loving." "Puzzle," although slow, is a beautiful and significant puzzle of its own.

 

Sign Up for KDHX Airwaves newsletter