Cinematic Releases: The Holdovers (2023) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Focus Features

For years Alexander Payne has been trying to posit himself in the film world as the new Hal Ashby or Bob Rafelson in terms of crafting distinctly homegrown road movies as American character studies, starting with his sleeper hit Election followed by the Academy Award nominated Jack Nicholson starring About Schmidt.  A couple years later the small-town American auteur joined forces with Paul Giamatti in the critically acclaimed Sideways before taking a bit of a hiatus for years until The Descendants and Nebraska came along.  

Payne was on track to become one of the most wholly original auteurs of modern American cinema with several acclaimed hits.  And then came Downsizing in 2017, a film which like Atom Egoyan’s Where the Truth Lies before it seemed to undermine the filmmaker’s credibility in the court of critical and commercial opinion.  Though Payne stayed active in film production, it would be six years before he would sit back in the director’s chair again.

 
Thankfully that fall from grace hasn’t slowed Payne down that much, reuniting the director with Paul Giamatti in ostensibly Payne’s very own riff on The Paper Chase with the hard-nosed college teacher dramedy The Holdovers.  The 1971 period-set story of a largely unlikable college professor Paul Hunham at Barton Academy who supervises students unable to return home from school for the holidays, the strict schoolteacher potentially on a cranky power trip meets his match in the form of rebellious smart mouthed student Angus Tully (newcomer Dominic Sessa in his screen debut).  Grieving the loss of his father, Angus and the glass-eyed Hunham lock horns immediately with the two testing each others’ limits.  From there however a unique bond forms between them and the school’s head cook Mary Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph) still grieving over the recent loss of her young son to the Vietnam War.

 
From its grainy cinematography by Eigil Bryld, soft Ira Newborn inspired score by Mark Orton opening across wobbly filmic credits and archaic Focus Features studio logos, The Holdovers lets you know from top to bottom it is a subtly immersive period piece.  Partially a coming-of-age dramedy, partially the story of three distinctly flawed characters who find unlikely solace in one another, partially a holiday travelogue through wintry Mobile, Alabama, it proves to a poignant tearjerker whose human dramas feel real rather than contrived.  

Much of the film’s strength rests on the shoulders of Paul Giamatti as a John Houseman type of curmudgeon who rules the classroom with an iron fist but secretly slacks around himself on the side.  Dominic Sessa in his first screen role recalls the Alana Haim casting in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Licorice Pizza in casting an untrained actor for a key role.  The one with the heaviest lifting is undoubtedly Da’Vine Joy Randolph who steals more than a few scenes away from both Giamatti and Sessa with a quietly powerful performance simmering with anger and hurt despite her maternal attitude towards Sessa’s plight.

 
While Alexander Payne’s return to the soft November weathered mumblecore dramedy won’t redeem Downsizing, it is nice to see him back at what he does best with one of his favorite key players taking the center lead.  Between its practical location photography with zero soundstages used, the cacophony of needle drops including but not limited to Ashby favorite Cat Stevens, Guy Lombardo, The Swingles and Badfinger, The Holdovers is an earnest throwback to a time when modestly sized character driven dramas were shot on film and allowed to breathe.  Paul Giamatti it goes without question is one of the best actors still working today and seeing him reunited with Payne is a miniature cause for celebration.  Yes at times the pacing is a bit languid but as a wintry holiday college dramedy The Holdovers
will grow on you.  Safe to say Alexander Payne is back at what he does best!

--Andrew Kotwicki