This review may contain spoilers
Credible about a housekeeper in Singapore.
Film debutant Anthony Chen has made a low-key and thoroughly credible drama.“Ilo Ilo draws the viewer into what feels like real everyday life where personalities grow and people influence each other.
Sometimes you don’t need big dramatic gestures, moralizing messages or tear-jerking resolutions to touch. Sometimes you just need something as simple as the story of a family and their housekeeper. Where you only feel a faint but lasting scent of emotions such as need for affirmation, jealousy and pride.
The film is director Anthony Chen’s (who made the award-winning short film Grandma) feature film debut and is based on his own diffuse childhood memories from the 1990s, which subtly play their own role as a time period in the film. The story takes place in Singapore, in a family struggling to make ends meet in an economically troubled society.
The pregnant mother (Yann Yann Yeo) is trying to keep her rebellious, 10-year-old son Jiale (Koh Jia Ler) in check while maintaining a perfect facade while the father (Tian Wen Chen) is secretly tinkering with his career and finances. In comes Teresa, a Filipino housekeeper in search of a better life in order to support her own child. Jiale shows her aversion to the new housemate early on, but soon the lives of all four begin to affect each other in ways they never expected.
We're not talking about Mary Poppins here - Forget all the Hollywood ingredients. Unlike its story-related cousins like Intouchables and Niceville, this is a quiet, low-key film that never gets boring. The sensitive, neutral acting combined with the lack of music and natural lighting almost makes it feel like you're peeking into a real home. It is not an extraordinary family with quarrels or escalating arguments, but at the same time personalities that grow, albeit slowly. You feel that something is happening and want to know what.
There are credible and titillating scenes here that build up the relationships. Like the son's bullying of the housekeeper, which in a laundry scene turns into a friendly water fight, or the mother's clumsy handling of her jealousy of her son's loving relationship with the housekeeper. The film's strength is spelled realism - Meetings and confrontations are like in reality, quiet and repressed, whether they are happy or painful.
There is no hint here that Chen is a debutante. It is an extremely well-directed film that lures the viewer in with small, effective means. Possibly a little too cold and stripped down for some. At first, the characters may seem a little unsympathetic, especially the son who is spoiled beyond all limits, but gradually we are drawn into their worlds whether we want to or not. You don't even have to like them, but we want to see that everything somehow works out.
Sometimes you don’t need big dramatic gestures, moralizing messages or tear-jerking resolutions to touch. Sometimes you just need something as simple as the story of a family and their housekeeper. Where you only feel a faint but lasting scent of emotions such as need for affirmation, jealousy and pride.
The film is director Anthony Chen’s (who made the award-winning short film Grandma) feature film debut and is based on his own diffuse childhood memories from the 1990s, which subtly play their own role as a time period in the film. The story takes place in Singapore, in a family struggling to make ends meet in an economically troubled society.
The pregnant mother (Yann Yann Yeo) is trying to keep her rebellious, 10-year-old son Jiale (Koh Jia Ler) in check while maintaining a perfect facade while the father (Tian Wen Chen) is secretly tinkering with his career and finances. In comes Teresa, a Filipino housekeeper in search of a better life in order to support her own child. Jiale shows her aversion to the new housemate early on, but soon the lives of all four begin to affect each other in ways they never expected.
We're not talking about Mary Poppins here - Forget all the Hollywood ingredients. Unlike its story-related cousins like Intouchables and Niceville, this is a quiet, low-key film that never gets boring. The sensitive, neutral acting combined with the lack of music and natural lighting almost makes it feel like you're peeking into a real home. It is not an extraordinary family with quarrels or escalating arguments, but at the same time personalities that grow, albeit slowly. You feel that something is happening and want to know what.
There are credible and titillating scenes here that build up the relationships. Like the son's bullying of the housekeeper, which in a laundry scene turns into a friendly water fight, or the mother's clumsy handling of her jealousy of her son's loving relationship with the housekeeper. The film's strength is spelled realism - Meetings and confrontations are like in reality, quiet and repressed, whether they are happy or painful.
There is no hint here that Chen is a debutante. It is an extremely well-directed film that lures the viewer in with small, effective means. Possibly a little too cold and stripped down for some. At first, the characters may seem a little unsympathetic, especially the son who is spoiled beyond all limits, but gradually we are drawn into their worlds whether we want to or not. You don't even have to like them, but we want to see that everything somehow works out.
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