Butterfly Jam – first-look review

Butterfly Jam – first-look review

Kantemir Balagov made acritical and artistic breakthrough with his second feature,Beanpole, acontrolled and symbolic pageant of unresolved trauma and the wintry depths of the Russian soul, shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic. Amember of the Circassian ethnic minority from the Caucasian regions near the Black Sea, Balagov spoke out against the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and relocated to North America shortly thereafter; like many new immigrants to the United States, his assimilation begins at an ethnic restaurant.

Zalya, named for its proprietress (Riley Keough) is an unassuming spot in an ugly building in Newark, New Jersey; harsh lighting bounces off its tile floors, so you know the cuisine is authentic. Zalya’s brother Azik (Barry Keoghan) makes fantasticdelens— potato and cheese pancakes which make northern New Jersey’s Circassian diaspora nostalgic for home. Azik is something of afuckup, per his sister, but he has high hopes for his 16-year-old son Temir (Talha Akdogan), apromising wrestler who credits his victories to his dad’s cooking, but is too shy to make eye contact with the sex worker he’s taken to see as acelebration gift after he wins atournament.

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Azik, Temir (nicknamed Pyteh, meaning little one”, by his father), and their friends are aboisterous clan who stand out for their heightened, primal behavior in ways that feel alternately forced and observant. They talk about things they saw on the TV” as if naifs from avillage that social media hasn’t reached; Keoghan gives Azik arambunctious physicality, always rolling over and off the furniture. When his best friend Marat (Harry Melling) challenges Pyteh to wrestle, he gets choked unconscious after refusing to tap out — this is aclassic trope, and one that Balagov stages with an avid, too-much musicality, mostly in the background of the scene, as chaotic punctuation to expository dialogue, occasionally crashing intofocus.

Played by Melling as aless charismatic version of De Niro’s Johnny Boy fromMean Streets, Marat has agrating looseness and get-rich schemes like buying abroken cotton candy machine. Azik, who emigrated to the United States as ateen, is less of an out-and-out lowlife, but has by this point reinvested his remaining hopes in his American-born son. When one impulsive play to demonstrate his ambition to Pyteh backfires, he makes atransparent attempt to save face, only for his own son to call him weak. So he shows off, taking risks, including birdnapping apelican in an extravagant attempt to impress his frustrated sister.

Remarkably, we have here asecond film in which Barry Keoghan plays ayoung dad who obtains an exotic pet as part of acunning plan to win awoman’s favor, thoughButterfly Jams realism is even more stylized than that of Andrea Arnold’s fableBird.We know from the film’s flash-forward opening that Pyteh’s father will die; the manner in which it happens underlines the film’s themes in heavy black ink, and also makes the clearest point of continuity withBeanpole, which also showcased Balagov’s talent for choreographing throat-catching violence in asingle virtuosic take. (Butterfly Jamwas shot, and gorgeously lit, byNickel Boyscinematographer Jomo Fray.) As jostly and handheld as all the film’s wrasslin’ and grapplin’ feels, its inquiry into animal competition and emasculation is rigorously schematic. Muscular, insecure Pyteh wears something pink in every scene, and the narrative contorts psychology into metaphor, forcing Balagov’s characters to speak and behave in away that, now that they speak the same language as me, seems far more stilted than it did inBeanpole.

Drawing on his own cultural context and working with the Safdie brothers’ street-casting whiz Eleonore Hendricks, Balagov illuminates corners of Newark that food tourists can only guess at. Akdogan, ateenage Kazakh immigrant with no previous film experience, is afind, as is the professional mourner who weeps into aBluetooth microphone connected to akaraōke speaker. Every time the film begins to seem fatally overdetermined, Balagov doubles down and produces amoment of absurd grace. The film’s most dubious elements – the pelican and the pink color scheme – pay off in aknowingly absurd coup de cinema, and the final scene, graced as it is by an apt and hilarious cameo, blessesButterfly Jamwith adusting of movie magic, and elevates it from the everyday American realm where it struggles to gain purchase.

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