Room

A potentially sensational premise is handled with grace and incisiveness in Room, Lenny Abrahamson’s adaptation of Emma Donoghue’s best-selling novel. Scripted by the author herself, and hewing closely to her book’s adolescent point-of-view, the film opens in what is initially known only as “Room,” a small, crowded space filled with a bed, a wardrobe, a few kitchen appliances, a table and drawings that decorate its walls. In this environment, which boasts a skylight but no windows, live Joy (Brie Larson) and her long-haired son Jack (Jacob Tremblay), the latter of whom has apparently never stepped outside Room’s sole door. That entryway is locked via a keypad, and only opened and closed by Old Nick (Sean Bridgers), a bearded figure who appears in the night while Jack sleeps (or pretends to) in order to deliver supplies and have his way with Joy.
Abrahamson’s film immediately sets itself alongside Jack, assuming his perspective as he narrates his thoughts, anxieties and skewed comprehension of reality. Believing that the world outside Room is “outer space,” that Room’s fixtures are his friends (he gives them all a morning greeting), and that only he, his mother and Old Nick are “real” (unlike the soap opera stars and Dora the Explorer cartoons he watches on TV), Jack is a boy capable of processing life solely through the warped prism of his hermetic upbringing. Room evokes his POV with curiosity and despondence—and always with intimacy—so that his fear is palpable when Old Nick makes his nocturnal visits, and his anger is overpowering when Joy explains to him the truth about their situation. It’s a revelation that, coming on the heels of Jack’s fifth birthday, is all the more shattering for being virtually impossible for the kid to properly comprehend.
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