Why Ryan Reynolds Isn't Making A Comeback Just Yet



via BuzzFeed

The Green Lantern star gets serious in Cannes kidnap drama The Captive , but it’s James McAvoy and Jessica Chastain’s The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby that’s the better portrait of loss.



Ryan Reynolds and Mireille Enos in The Captive


A24


Ryan Reynolds has played superheroes, romantic comedy leads, seventh-year college students, and sitcom characters, but at this year's Cannes Film Festival, he appeared in a role he hasn't for years — that of a serious actor. Reynolds tends to get cast as the smartass, even in darker films, but he's shown some underappreciated dramatic chops when he's had the chance.


In the role of a working class Niagara-area dad in The Captive, the latest movie from Atom Egoyan, Reynolds joins fellow Canucks Scott Speedman and Kevin Durand, as well as Rosario Dawson and The Killing's Mireille Enos, in dealing with some heavy material in the story of the kidnapping of a young girl and the eight years that follow.


As Matthew, Reynolds navigates a seemingly permanent winter, his daughter Cass (Alexia Fast) being kidnapped, his marriage falling apart, and the discovery, much later, that his child might still be alive. He gamely weathers wild plot twists, but it's a lot of effort to a disappointing end — The Captive is a ludicrous movie that believes it's a very serious one, and the cast gets caught in the carnage.


Two-time Oscar nominee Egoyan earned his place as one of Canada's top filmmakers with a run of acclaimed movies in the '90s, including Exotica, The Sweet Hereafter, and Felicia's Journey. But nothing he's done since has been on the same level. His last feature, Devil's Knot, was dropped unnoticed into theaters earlier this month, despite starring Reese Witherspoon, Colin Firth, and Dane DeHaan.



Rosario Dawson in The Captive


A24


The Captive feels like an unintentional parody of those earlier Egoyan films, bringing back many of the same themes and tropes for a central idea that isn't just silly, it's offensive. The fractured timeline, the thriller-as-dark-fairy-tale feel, the repeated references to The Magic Flute — they're in line with Egoyan's past work, but this time, in service to a story of a technological sophisticated ring of pedophiles so advanced in their perversions, they get off on stories and images of grief, some of which they caused.


As the movie skips back and forth between the (genuinely nightmarishly staged) moment in which Cass vanishes, the situation in which she ended up, and the changing relationship between Dawson and Speedman's detective characters, the stakes feel lower the more information is revealed. And despite its subject matter, The Captive essentially excises the idea of sex from its storyline by suggesting it's been sublimated into this consumption of suffering and memories instead. It's a paranoid helicopter parent's ideal affirmation — a thriller in which the world really is conspiring to snatch up your child, but only to mess with you.


The Captive will be released in theaters in the United Sates by A24, but another Cannes movie about the loss of a child and the way it affects a marriage will likely beat it into theaters.




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