THE CHRISTOPHERS
Directing: B+
Acting: B+
Writing: B+
Cinematography: B
Editing: B
Does Steven Soderbergh do anything besides direct movies? Okay, he directs TV every few years. He’s directed 33 feature films over the past 41 years—that’s an average of one every 15 months. And after three decades of films as varied as Sex, Lies, and Videotape and Erin Brockovich and Ocean’s Eleven and Traffic and Contagion and Magic Mike, his last decade has included eleven feature films and three limited TV series, which on average have been smaller productions that were surprisingly underrated. He’s put out three feature films in the past 15 years alone, from the fascinating but distractingly experimental Presence to the fantastic Black Bag (those two were released all of 7 weeks apart), and now, The Christophers.
Soderbergh is so prolific that I completely forgot he directed this movie. I remember seeing the trailer, and I must have clocked then that it was a Soderbergh movie. But I wasn’t thinking about him at all as I watched it, and was far more compelled by the great performances of an 86-year-old Ian McKellen, and a deceptively stoic Michaela Coel. Coel is here in her first lead role since the earth-shattering TV series I May Destroy You, and it’s clear that she chooses her projects very carefully.
Coel plays Lori Butler, an art restorer who is hired to work with McKellen’s Julian Sklar, a once-very-famous artist now long past his prime. This dynamic, with a younger character contending with a frustratingly enigmatic older character, does recall the 1998 film Gods and Monsters—my person introduction to McKellen as an actor, and even then he was 59 years old (but played 67). I’ve really only ever known McKellen as an old man, and ironically he gained his international fame in the years after that, thanks to the likes of The Lord of the Rings and The X-Men. He seems to be coming full circle now with The Christophers: in both this and in Gods and Monsters he played a queer old man—an artist, even—who never fully came to grips with his sexuality.
What truly makes The Christophers its own thing is Michaela Coel, who is the protagonist of the film. She finds herself hired by Julian Sklar’s fairly dopey two children, played by James Corden and Baby Reindeer’s Jessica Gunning—these two are very well-cast as siblings, though neither of them bear much of a resemblance to Ian McKellen. We do learn that they are actually half-siblings, given Julian’s reference to “their mothers,” and they are obsessed with profiting off the value of Julain’s paintings after his death. This is what they hire Lori for: to fraudulently finish a series of paintings known as “the Christophers”—fabled portraits of a lover who long ago left him—which they know to be languishing unfinished in the top level of his cluttered home.
We never learn much more about Julian’s family or how they came to be so contemptuous of each other, except that Julian blames his kids’ mothers for how they turned out because he “never had anything to do with them.” What we do get is a fascinating portrait of the tenuous connection growing between Julian and Lori, even though Lori openly detests him and is convinced to take this job as a means of revenge. Revenge for what, we do not learn until well into the film, but after Julian makes many offhand remarks about how Weinstein ruined the world for everyone, such as when Lori says Julian should not hang around her in pajama bottoms and an open bathrobe. Indeed, a couple of brief scenes like this are genuinely uncomfortable.
But the truth of Lori’s plan and her motives is uncovered quickly, by Julian who proves surprisingly adept at Internet research and use—indeed, when Lori first meets him, he’s in the middle of recording the Cameo videos he sells to fans in order to make a living (Cameo is never mentioned, of course, but we know what it is). This is how The Christophers gets really interesting, thanks to a script by Ed Solomon (who also wrote No Sudden Move, a very different movie that also happens to be one of Soderbergh’s many recent films). It never goes quite in the direction you expect, and we watch these two sort of begrudgingly come to respect each other’s work, if not necessarily each other.
It’s worth noting that The Christophers has all of 12 credited parts, only four parts of any significance, and Corden and Gunning are only in a few short scenes. The vast majority of this movie features only Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel onscreen, two very different characters dancing around each other’s suspicions, resentments and betrayals. The two of them deliver a ton of dialogue, and I was especially impressed by McKellen’s delivery of a self-deluded bloviator’s lengthy diatribes. Julian is not a particularly pleasant character, but McKellen still imbues him with a broken soul.
The Christophers is unlike any of Steven Soderbergh’s countless other films, and that’s one of the many things I really like about it. This is what seems to characterize Soderbergh’s later work: he seems willing to try anything, and it doesn’t seem to matter what he tries, he does it well. This is a guy who is not seeing out to make masterpieces, he just loves movies, and he loves making movies for people who love movies. This is just the latest of dozens of reasons why I remain happy he’s still working.
The Art of Deception: Michaela Coel and Ian McKellen make a deliciously odd couple in The Christophers.
