Francesca Scorsese and Sawyer Spielberg could be the draw in this tedium-rich tale of an Italian American festive gathering
The prosaic anti-escapism of this sprawling American indie thoroughly subverts the expectations of the festive family movie. Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point is a mosaic portrait of an extended Italian American family gathered for their traditional seasonal celebration in Long Island. This may be the last year they do so: the suburban home of the ailing family matriarch is to be sold. Food is consumed, booze is swigged and the uncles bicker.
Director Tyler Taormina (Ham on Rye) strings together a picture that seems to be 80% composed of establishing shots of tinsel and festive tat, punctuated by micro non-events and meandering conversations. It’s almost radical in its banality, capturing rather effectively the overstuffed inertia of a family Christmas and the simmering generational tensions. But Taormina’s all vibes, no story approach tests the patience.
In UK and Irish cinemas
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