Cinematic Releases: Flora and Son (2023) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Apple Original Films

Irish writer-director John Carney, best known for his distinctly acoustic musical dramedies including the Academy Award winning Once, Begin Again and Sing Street, is back with another snapshot of the musical undercurrent of Dublin, Ireland in his Apple TV+ original film Flora and Son.  More or less a continuation of the themes running through his previous features involving the musical component of relationships and again focusing on the plight of the single mother, the new Irish dramedy picks up where his previous three pictures left off while giving character actress Eve Hewson a chance to shine in one of her first leading roles on the silver screen. 

 
Reuniting with songwriter Gary Clark who composed and performed the music on Sing Street, this fairly lighthearted story of a young single divorced nightclubbing mother named Flora (Eve Hewson) in a crummy apartment complex living with her rambunctious troublemaking but musically gifted son Max (Orén Kinlan) in between visits with professional musician dad Ian (Jack Reynor from Midsommar).  After being booked for bad behavior again, the Gardai suggests Flora help Max find a healthy creative hobby, leading her to find an old guitar which she has refurbished before picking up online lessons from an LA based guitar instructor named Jeff (Joseph Gordon-Levitt).  Soon she discovers Max is infatuated with composing his own electronic music and eventually the idea comes up for mother and son to join forces for their own unique musical act.

 
An easy-going thickly Irish musical dramedy lensed in panoramic widescreen by John Conroy with writer-director John Carney co-writing the music with Gary Clark, the character driven ensemble piece centered around Flora features U2 frontman Bono’s daughter Eve Hewson playing the guitar herself and doing all of her own singing on the soundtrack.  The same can be said for Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the guitar instructor who also remarked it was his first time on film playing the guitar.  Second to Gordon-Levitt, Jack Reynor is the most recognizable face in the film as an estranged father figure who has moved on but still cares for their son Max, played wonderfully by newcomer Orén Kinlan.  As with Once, the music propels the story and informs the characters while never fully breaking into a full-blown musical number until key dramatic points.  The result is a straightforward drama with a tendency to drift in and out of song.

 
A simple minded and direct crowd pleaser, a snapshot of modern Dublin and a continuation of the director’s own musical streak, Flora and Son won’t wow viewership but it will put a smile on most people’s faces.  The Irish accents, crass sass talking of the film’s titular heroine and the languid narrative pacing won’t thrill theatergoers though the preview audience laughed quite a bit before applauding at the end.  Intended for wide-release in Ireland followed by a streaming release through Apple TV+, the film works best as an at-home streamer trained on characters will giving subscribers something sort of sweet natured.  While debatably the director’s Once still looms higher above this endeavor, its still nice to see John Carney doing his thing again. 

--Andrew Kotwicki