This Must Be The Place Review

This Must Be The Place
Reclusive ’80s pop star Cheyenne (Penn) is loathe to leave his Irish mansion and his devoted wife (McDormand). But a summons to his estranged father, dying in New York, propels Cheyenne on an odyssey across America in search of the Nazi war criminal his f

by Angie Errigo |
Published on
Release Date:

06 Apr 2012

Running Time:

118 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

This Must Be The Place

To European art house sensibilities there is no stranger landscape than the American psyche, and no premise too improbable to indulge in a surreal vehicular excursion on which nearly every American encountered seems colourfully crazy, dangerous, grotesque, narrow-minded, fantastically generous and/or a rich braggart — preferably with a deep-fried Southern accent. Throw in some iconic natural wonder — the Grand Canyon, Monument Valley or, in this case, the Great Salt Lake of Utah — plus a cameo from Harry Dean Stanton, and voilà, you have your scenic, philosophical road trip. The self-discovery honours here fall to Sean Penn’s questing traveller in a characterisation that is transformative writ large.

Director and screenwriter Paolo Sorrentino has won scads of awards for The Consequences Of Love, The Family Friend and Il Divo. But we’re not entirely sure what he’s trying to pull off in his first English-language project, written with Umberto Contarello. It’s a patchwork quilt of encounters in many colours and moods. There are vignettes of warmth, notably with women: in Cheyenne’s home life with his practical, kind and good-humoured wife of 35 years, Frances McDormand’s Jane, who we would have liked to have seen more of; in his friendship with teenaged number-one fan, Bono’s daughter Eve Hewson’s Mary; and with the lonely single mum, Kerry Condon’s Rachel, who takes him in when he straggles into New Mexico. There is humour, from good lines (“Rock stars shouldn’t have kids because you run the risk of your daughter becoming a wacky stylist”) and from the sheer incongruity of Cheyenne, who sticks out like a sore thumb in small-town, strip-mall America, as a man on a mission.

There is cool: David Byrne playing himself as friend and mage to the lost protagonist. There are also puzzling subplots, narrative non sequiturs, overt symbolism and The Holocaust, its consequences touching characters who know nothing about it.

Penn’s bored, deadpan, sorrowful Goth relic, with his thin, high, flutey little voice and heavy, smeared make-up, is a gob-smacker — funny, insecure, but with a childlike honesty and courage, and near miraculously touching. This also scores highly for originality, unpredictability and cinematography (Luca Bigazzi); less so for dubious taste and bewildering twists.

Determinedly quirky and cool, arresting and ultimately too baffling to be satisfying, although Penn is priceless. Cultdom beckons.
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