Cinematic Releases: With Love and a Major Organ (2024) - Reviewed

 

Images Courtesy of Circle Collective

Kim Albright's debut feature film, With Love and a Major Organ is one of the most brilliant and hopeful films of the century.  A dystopian, quasi love story by way of The Lobster and The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, this is a unique adaptation of a stage play that challenges the notions of an electronically connected future, love, loneliness, and ultimately presents a neo-fable about the importance of acceptance and self-love.   Featuring a brilliant lead performance, a slick script, and an unusual amount of restraint, this is an essential viewing experience.  

In an alternate world, humanity's day to day experiences are dictated by a life controlling social app, emotional experiences are carefully booked day spas, and the human heart is a physical object that can be removed.  Anabel is one of the last holdouts, a struggling artist and keepsake insurance claims specialist who falls in love and ultimately gives her heart away in a desperate bid to avoid the coldness of her existence.  Julie Lederer's script runs the gamut of emotions.  It is hilarious, heartbreaking and at times, conceptually gruesome. This is about a world of prisons, not terribly unlike our own.  Parents build walls around children while adults build walls around their hearts and the presentation and dialogue is reflective both of this truth and of the social media illusion that conceals it. 


Anna Maguire gives a bravura performance as Anabel.  She is supported by Hamza Haq as her potential love interest, George.  The brilliance of this film is in how the actors play their characters at various points within the narrative.  A straight comedy would have the two principles mimicking certain aspects, but everything remains fairly grounded and natural under Albright’s command.  While there are some laugh out loud moments, for the most part there is a malaise of unhappiness that only increases once Anabel makes her choice and this is perfectly realized by Maguire's dedicated performance. 

Leonardo Harim's cinematography is unobtrusive and sterile, embodying the familiar strangeness of the world in which the story takes place.  Shots of nature are juxtaposed from the emotionless streets of the city and the way in which Anabel and George are framed throughout their respective journeys is resplendent.  Ultimately there are many things that one can take from this film, but at the center is that one's heart, no matter the circumstance, must be given the freedom to love and lose and the moody underpinnings of Harim's compositions drive this home.  

Coming soon to theaters, With Love and a Major Organ is a high concept film that plays with many genres to deliver a touching emotional sojourn of individuality, creativity, and unconditional love.  While the offbeat presentation may repel some viewers, anyone looking for an interesting approach to the familiar dilemmas that continue to grow in the here and now, this will not disappoint. 

--Kyle Jonathan

 

--Kyle Jonathan