Hardscrabble grief hides behind high-scoring phrases on the Scrabble board in “Sometimes Always Never,” English director Carl Hunter’s scattered-brained however finally affecting hodgepodge of a primary characteristic. As in the event that they’re random letter tiles from a full bag, some concepts create which means whereas others crowd the hand with out a lot use.
Bill Nighy dons the deadpan appeal of wordsmith Alan, a person unable to have interaction with the probability that his son Michael, gone lacking way back, could by no means flip up. “Hope is a great friend,” he tells his different grownup youngster, Peter (Sam Riley), throughout a visit towards doable closure. Nuanced feelings escape his vocabulary, and in his quest for the prodigal son, he’s alienated the son who stays, the stable fixed he takes without any consideration.
Known for heartfelt dramas that embrace Danny Boyle’s “Millions” and Simon Curtis’ “Goodbye Christopher Robin,” screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce creates characters charged with latent resentment, unresolved loss and unhealthy protection mechanisms. Their core quandary sustains curiosity all through, even when heavy visible and narrative ornamentation — specifically Wes Anderson-like quirkiness — usually obscures it.
In “Sometimes Always Never” — which isn’t to be confused with Eliza Hittman’s current “Never Rarely Sometimes Always” — two-letter phrases, primarily from the Greek alphabet, have secured many a Scrabble victory for Alan. It’s a brainy pastime he dominates with aggressive competitiveness. For Peter, nonetheless, it’s symbolic of the rupture between them, and of a lifetime of second-bests and a childhood of low-cost generic toys and feeling like “a poor substitute.”
Alan, a defiantly unemotional, tech-savvy boomer, largely ignores these claims, however briefly admits his personal standing as an inadequate alternative for the boys’ mom. Still, above all, the seek for the absent liked one consumes him. He by no means comes out and flatly says, “The wrong son died,” however Peter can learn it within the subtext of his actions. An encounter with a pair in an identical predicament momentarily spurs Alan’s empathy, to the extent that he has any.
Localized comedy, like a nod to Pickwick’s “Top of the Pops” cowl songs, will fly over most individuals’s heads however will assist some viewers discover the humor in a number of the extra disheartening eventualities, reminiscent of a go to to the morgue. Nighy’s earnestly debonair presence, excellent for the position of a strolling thesaurus not susceptible to introspection, saves Alan from seeming deliberately hurtful. To cope, he’s submerged himself in practicality, actively making an attempt to resolve a thriller which will don’t have any reply. That obvious obliviousness to the information frustrates Peter intensely – however is the proper strategy to combat till dad admits his faults, or to simply accept that he’s dealing with the ache as finest he can, even when which means a sure disconnect?
Strong casting retains the movie thriving by means of its many winding subplots. Scenes between Nighy and Riley dominate, however the always-delightful Alice Lowe, as Peter’s spouse, throws down an influence tile with a heat question about one of the best end result within the Michael state of affairs: If he’s lifeless, then it’s a tragedy; however is he’s alive dwelling someplace and shunning the household, then guilt could also be insufferable for Alan. It’s a chance with no successful outcome.
A 3rd of the way in which in, the main focus shifts to Alan’s initially vapid relationship with teenage grandson Jack (Louis Healy), an introvert looking for the arrogance to strategy a lady. The boy’s makeover from sweatshirt gamer to sharp-dresser unceremoniously unmasks the film’s title as a reference to the correct use of buttons on a go well with jacket, relying on the event.
Alan’s tailoring experience bears no relevance previous this level; it’s one other within the pile of buried particulars, like his short-lived affair whereas staying at Peter’s house. More noteworthy is his obsession with sticking labels on family objects to explain their function or to…