Movies

‘The Father’ is Anthony Hopkins’ greatest performance in decades — Sundance review

The Father puts you in the shoes of a man () suffering from dementia as he tries to figure out what his reality truly is

While Sundance has had a mixed track record in recent years as a platform to launch an Oscar contender, I have almost no doubt in my mind that will receive a Best Actor nomination for his performance as the eponymous father Anthony in playwright Florian Zeller's directorial debut The Father, which played in the Premieres section at the . It's a rarity for an actor as esteemed as Hopkins to get another career-defining performance this late, but there's no other way to describe it other than a tour-de-force and perhaps his greatest role to date. 

Adapting from his own play Le Père, Zeller tells the story of Anthony (Hopkins), an elderly man who recently moved in with his daughter Anne (Oscar winner and overall lovely human ). For much of the beginning of the movie, it seems like a pretty standard drama about a man facing a deteriorating mental state as he deals with dementia — similar to Michael Haneke's Amour, a film I adore. He's forgetful and sometimes paranoid, particularly about his watch, which he believes his caretaker stole. 

However, as the movie unfolds, it becomes clear that we're watching it from Anthony's perspective. It starts out slow at first, small changes in the environment, forgotten names or events. At one point his daughter tells him she's moving to Paris to be with her new husband. The next, she's still married to the man she's always been with (Mark Gatiss). In the next, that man changes to a completely different person (Rufus Sewell).

💌 Sign up for our weekly email newsletter with movie recommendations available to stream.


ADVERTISEMENT


Zeller begins to play with the viewer in other ways. More than any movie about dementia I've seen in the past, it truly gives you the feeling of what it feels like to be in and out of lucidity. Suffering from dementia should feel like a horror movie and that's what The Father achieves. Surprisingly, it's the moments of clarity — if there ever truly is one — that are the most horrific. You're never sure what reality actually is. 

Hopkins' is an emotional powerhouse whose empathetic performance is impossible to not completely give in to. While the movie, to its fault, sometimes feels a little too much like a play adapted to the screen, it feels like an honor to be front row to such a raw and emotive performance. Not once does it ring false. Brilliantly, you can see the man that Anthony once was beneath the confusion. 

It's difficult to make a movie about this subject matter move with so much rhythm. However, once The Father has you, it's hard to fall out of its momentum. It may feel stagey at times, as movies based on plays often feel, but it almost works for the effect that Zeller is going for. The devastating final act is when you finally crash to reality and Anthony Hopkins delivers some of the greatest work I think I've seen on screen. It may be early, but one of your Oscar frontrunners is here.


ADVERTISEMENT


More movies, less problems


Hey! I'm Karl. You can find me on Twitter here. I'm also a Tomatometer-approved critic.

💌 Sign up for our weekly email newsletter with movie recommendations available to stream.


ADVERTISEMENT


💌 Sign up for our weekly email newsletter with movie recommendations available to stream.


ADVERTISEMENT


Karl Delossantos

Hey, I'm Karl, founder and film critic at Smash Cut. I started Smash Cut in 2014 to share my love of movies and give a perspective I haven't yet seen represented. I'm also an editor at The New York Times, a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, and a member of the Online Film Critics Society.

Leave a Comment
Published by
Karl Delossantos

Recent Posts

‘Wicked’ defies expectations, a fearless movie-musical | movie review

Wicked, the long-awaited adaptation of the smash Broadway musical, finally flies its way into theaters… Read More

1 month ago

<em>No Other Land</em> is the most important documentary of our time | movie review

No Other Land follows a Palestinian activist as he documents the destruction of his community… Read More

3 months ago

‘Queer’ is messy, mad and marvelous | review and analysis

Based on William S. Burroughs novel of the same name, Queer follows an American expat's… Read More

3 months ago

Surreal dramedy <em>The Life of Chuck</em> ponders life and death | TIFF 2024

TIFF 2024 | The Life of Chuck follows an enigmatic man starting as a surrealist… Read More

3 months ago

Diabolically fun horror <em>Heretic</em> will make you believe | TIFF 2024

A pair of young Mormon missionaries find themselves at the center of a sinister plot… Read More

3 months ago

Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield charm and fall in love in <em>We Live In Time</em> | TIFF 2024

TIFF 2024 | Moving back and forth in their history, We Live In Time follows… Read More

3 months ago