Miami Herald

‘Tuesday’ a dark fairy tale led by superb Louis-Dreyfus

- BY MICHAEL PHILLIPS

Those of us movie critics fortunate enough to be in this line of work are always trying to squeeze another two hours or so out of the week to catch one more new film. Because you never know. Which is to say: I’m extremely happy to have seen “Tuesday,” which demands and receives new and challengin­g things from Julia LouisDreyf­us while announcing a formidable new filmmaker, the Croatian writer-director Daina O. Pusic. She has created an imperfect but singular fairy tale for adults, but not just adults, really. There’s real magic and deep feeling behind it.

Allow me to describe it deceptivel­y. “Tuesday” is the name of the 15-yearold girl using a wheelchair, hooked up to IVs, in the care of a home nurse while the girl’s mother works. Even when she’s not working, the mother, Zora, played by Louis-Dreyfus, doesn’t spend much meaningful time with her girl. Tuesday is dying. Zora isn’t coping well. Grief has a way of arriving before a loved one dies, and Zora’s grief has thrown her into a nervous whirlwind of busyness and chatter.

Now for the fantastica­l aspect of “Tuesday.” The first character we meet in Pusic’s story is a macaw, in fact a Macaw of Death. (The bird, which can radically size-shift from teenytiny to halfway-to-Kong size, is billed in the credits simply as “Death.”) With a brief, calm wave of its wing, Death brings the end to humans whose laments Death has heard, and will heed. This grubby but remarkable bird, badly in need of a bath and some peace, has a difficult time tuning out Earth’s perpetual chorus of lamentatio­n.

Now it’s Tuesday’s time, her breathing having grown increasing­ly labored. The macaw arrives in Zora’s London townhouse at the appropriat­e time. (Death can speak, by the way; Nigerian-born actor Arinzé Kene provides the unearthly deep but surprising­ly companiona­ble voice characteri­zation.)

For a time, Tuesday and Death find solace in each other’s temporary company. Shrinking down, the macaw enjoys a badly needed bath in Tuesday’s bathroom sink. Tuesday plays one of her favorite songs, Ice Cube’s “It Was a Good Day,” which turns out to be a favorite of Death’s, too. They get high, in a scene not played for the kind of laugh you might expect, even from an off-center, A24-distribute­d picture.

Early on we see Zora bartering with a taxidermis­t, trying to sell a couple of stuffed rats, so we know money is tight for this woman, because dying is expensive. “Tuesday” phases into a darker, wilder hue once Zora meets the macaw, and does everything she can — including swallowing the bird whole! — to prolong her daughter’s life a bit longer, even if Zora hasn’t yet used the time they have especially wisely. Meantime an apocalypse, glimpsed in a few brief images, rages all over London, and presumably elsewhere.

The movie scatters and, here and there, stumbles a bit in its second half. And yet the spell never broke for me. The everyday heartbreak, such as LouisDreyf­us’ startled, shaken nonverbal reaction to the taxidermis­t’s casual question about the age of her

daughter, makes “Tuesday” a very full experience. Louis-Dreyfus is wonderful in this, ready for anything, never soft-pedaling her character’s flaws or panic or fear. Lola Petticrew makes Tuesday both compelling and admirable in her directness. As Tuesday’s caregiver, Leah Harvey is equally fine.

None of their work would be half as effective without the marvelousl­y matter-of-fact digital realizatio­n of Death, thanks to visual effects supervisor­s Mike Stillwell and Andrew Simmonds. There is scarcely a moment in “Tuesday” wasted on a shock-cut or a jump-scare or anything at odds with the atmosphere of quiet astonishme­nt. Sound designer Gunnar Óskarsson’s avian shudders and human lamentatio­ns fill the soundtrack when needed, but sparingly. And when Death speaks, we see and hear the hesitancy, even if it’s something as simple as his appreciati­on of sarcasm. (Jesus was really into it, he notes.) This is, after all, a creature that hasn’t spoken in roughly 200 years.

Magical talking birds have flown in and out of plenty of timeworn fairy tales and folktales, from Gozzi’s play “The Green

Bird” to Sicilian folklore and beyond. But this one’s really something. I can’t wait to see what this filmmaker does next. Same with Louis-Dreyfus, although “Tuesday” reminds us she can do just about anything.

 ?? A24/TNS ?? Lola Petticrew, left, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus star in Daina O. Pusic’s ‘Tuesday.’
A24/TNS Lola Petticrew, left, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus star in Daina O. Pusic’s ‘Tuesday.’

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