‘Fowl’ assessment: Andrea Arnold’s coming-of-age fable comes up barely brief

Andrea Arnold lobs every little thing together with the kitchen sink at her newest story of realism, although she will be able to’t fairly stability its highs and lows. Fowl follows a poor 12-year-old’s coming-of-age in Southeast England, and her friendship with a mysterious stranger. It is as a lot about dirty, tangible particulars as it’s about ethereal concepts of what the lens can (and can’t) see, however this self-reflexivity is, without delay, the film’s most breathtaking side, in addition to its undoing.

Arnold has lengthy employed a roving lens to discover rural and suburban landscapes. Fowl, her first fiction movie is almost a decade, isn’t any exception, although she affords herself an excessive amount of aesthetic liberty at occasions. This time round, her handheld model is extra chaotic than exploratory. It typically obscures greater than it reveals. Nevertheless, her actors assist her in capturing simply sufficient vulnerability to make up for this misstep.

The movie does not fairly match collectively, however its particular person items will be dazzling. Some even border on the divine, they usually work to remind us that even a lesser Arnold remains to be a minimize above most individuals’s greatest.

What’s Fowl about?

Nykiya Adams as Bailey in


Credit score: Atsushi Nishijima / Courtesy of MUBI

Arduous-as-nails Bailey (newcomer Nykiya Adams), a 12-year-old biracial Black woman, lives together with her younger, wayward white father, Bug (Barry Keoghan, Saltburn), in a dilapidated condominium venture in Kent, England. In actual fact, their city is named Gravesend, a murky identify that echoes their dead-end prospects, although this does not cease Bug from planning a marriage celebration he cannot afford. To Bailey’s chagrin, Bug’s girlfriend of three months and now fiancée, Kayleigh (Frankie Field), is about to maneuver into their house together with her toddler daughter. The pre-teen lashes out, and makes an attempt to affix the vigilante gang run by her 14-year-old half-brother, Hunter (Jason Buda).

Arnold typically takes an indirect, blink-and-you’ll-miss-it strategy to establishing a few of these relationships, which regularly come to gentle by way of fast and muffled dialogue. That is, in essence, the purpose. It may be initially laborious to inform whether or not the closely tattooed, high-energy Bug is Bailey’s father or her sibling, or the place Bug and Hunter are associated in any respect — they barely share the display — which speaks to how younger and ill-prepared Bug is for fatherhood, and the household’s fractured nature.

Hunter and his scrawny associates attempt to take the legislation into their very own palms by attacking home abusers and recording their assaults for social media, and whereas this might make its personal intriguing function, it is however a passing element in Arnold’s jagged-edged world — for higher or worse. Whereas it does ultimately repay within the plot (and has at the least glancing thematic relevance), it could possibly’t assist however really feel like a morally intriguing side of Bailey’s story has gone unexplored.

After Bailey is ousted from these missions for her security, she comes throughout a clumsy, pleasant determine who goes solely by the identify Fowl (Franz Rogowski, Passages). Fowl claims to have come to Gravesend to trace down his dad and mom, from whom he was separated as a toddler. In line with the movie’s persistent subject, this saga can be sidelined as quickly because it will get fascinating, however the ephemeral nature of Fowl’s arrival is, in its personal means, wondrous.

Mashable High Tales

Franz Rogowski brings a shimmering heat to Fowl.

Franz Rogowski in


Credit score: Robbie Ryan / Courtesy of MUBI

From the second he seems, Rogowski’s gentle physicality brings dazzling distinction to Bailey’s rough-and-tumble world, constructing intrigue within the course of. Their preliminary connection is constructed on commonalities; Fowl defies gender binaries along with his prolonged skirt, as does Bailey together with her brief hair and boisterous angle, they usually occur to satisfy within the wide-open isolation of a lonely area, as in the event that they’re every escaping from one thing. Nevertheless, Fowl additionally represents a way of wide-eyed chance that Bailey’s environment do not typically permit her to really feel.

One thing so simple as Fowl’s quiet smile, and his seeming pleasant demeanor with no ulterior motives, feels completely alien to Bailey, although it’d to most individuals. Rogowski performs Fowl with one eye in the direction of rejecting all issues cynical, whether or not to take care of optimism about his familial search or just because that is some innate high quality Fowl occurs to own.

Fowl typically rides the road between character and idealistic image, particularly when Bailey begins capturing him together with her telephone digital camera, and projecting his photographs on her bed room wall. Every so often, he’ll stand perched on the roof of a close-by constructing, unmoving, wanting down at her like an angelic being. The way in which he carries himself is gorgeous and breathtaking. He is a breath of recent air that Bailey and the film sorely want.

Fowl is nearly self-reflexive about its photographs — however not fairly.

Barry Keoghan in


Credit score: Courtesy of MUBI

Sadly, Bailey’s proclivity for capturing surroundings is one more thought left unexplored, despite the fact that Fowl is at its most potent when dipping its toe into her perspective. Her photos and movies are light in a means her environment are usually not, and the query of whether or not she’s projecting this gentleness out into the world or discovering it in locations others may not search it stays largely untouched.

Arnold is often adept at capturing the rhythms and invisible hues of anyplace she movies, however her framing right here is commonly so off-kilter as to be nauseating. Fowl is simply too fast and chaotic to ever ruminate on its photographs — Arnold’s personal, or those she creates for Bailey — which makes her protagonist’s personal perspective really feel fleeting, even when the film delves additional into her household.  

Nevertheless, Fowl’s enigmatic presence, as briefly seen by way of Bailey’s eyes, is simply alluring sufficient, and permits Arnold to maintain an observational distance with out the film coming aside on the seams. Alongside the way in which, as teenage drama involves the fore, it is also complemented by unusual happenings verging on magical realism, due to the unusual conduct of animals. Whereas these will be chalked as much as coincidental oddities, they’re framed with simply sufficient mischief to pose pleasant doubts concerning the film’s true nature.

Whether or not or not Fowl represents or possesses some sort of divinity is virtually irrelevant within the face of whether or not or not Bailey can acknowledge this or seize it. Nevertheless, fairly than exploring its latent symbolism, the movie quickly begins straying into awfully literal territory. It can not seem to preserve its sense of thriller for very lengthy. Within the course of, even its most life-affirming moments are likely to lose their affect, despite the fact that Rogowski’s otherworldliness is a marvel to behold.

Fowl is now in theaters.

UPDATE: Nov. 8, 2024, 9:19 a.m. EST Fowl was initially reviewed out of its NewFest premiere in New York. This text has been republished for its theatrical debut.