Skip to content

Movie Review: Take Shelter

Written By:

Paul Mount
takesheltertitle

alt

Review: Take Shelter (15) / Directed by: Jeff Nichols / Written by: Jeff Nichols / Starring:  Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain, Shea Whigham, Tova Stewart / Released: Out Now

Burly Curtis LaFalce (Shannon) is a construction worker from Ohio living a simple, unassuming life with his wife Samantha (Chastain) and their deaf six year-old daughter Hannah (Stewart). The family pay their mortgage and their bills, they enjoy a beach holiday every summer. But Curtis is a troubled man; he’s plagued by nightmarish dreams of savage storms, swooping malevolent birds, rain falling like oil. When he wakes up he’s sweating and gasping for breath. Something’s not right and although Curtis suspects the first stirrings of the psychotic condition which affected his mother twenty-five years before, he opts not to seek help but prefers to act on the ‘visions’ in his dreams. Convinced that a huge, devastating storm is on its way he quietly sets about building a storm shelter out in the yard and in doing so he risks his job, his family and, ultimately, his fragile sanity.

It’s stretching a point somewhat to describe Jeff Nichols’ latest intense, brooding drama as “apocalyptic” as the world doesn’t actually end but the film exudes an atmosphere of impending doom and disaster throughout as the audience begins to wonder if Curtis is slowly going mad or if he genuinely is a visionary, a seer gazing through a window into some terrifying future. Curtis is a quiet, introverted and largely uncommunicative man; he’s an unremarkable blue collar worker, a man who can’t rationalise what’s happening to him and who focuses utterly on what he perceives to be the need to protect his wife and child from impending disaster. But in doing so Curtis becomes destructive and anti-social, turning away from those he’s trying to protect and eventually, turning even his friends and family against him because they can’t understand what’s happening and why he’s doing what he’s doing.

Take Shelter’ is a film about a man falling apart, realising he’s falling apart and yet still pursuing a course of action which he knows is putting at risk everything he holds dear. Curtis isn’t depicted as mad, he’s depicted as strong, determined and single-minded, a classic American family man confused and confounded by circumstances over which he has no control because they’re so far out of his sphere of experience.

This is a rich, thoughtful movie, a film which moves at its own unhurried pace. Nichols’ direction of his own screenplay is simple and unshowy – there are one or two ‘big’ visual scenes – but he generally lets his lead players carry the weight of the drama and they do it brilliantly. Shannon (soon to be seen as Zod in the latest ‘Superman’ reboot) is all brooding, simmering masculinity, a man whose actions are louder than words whereas Chastain is a wife and mother who loves her husband and adores her family and yet fears for the man she loves when it becomes clear his problems go deeper than just a few sleepless nights.

And yet, frustratingly, ‘Take Shelter’ nearly throws it all away by not knowing when to quit while it’s ahead. It looks as if Curtis might have found a sort of peace of mind and a justification for the torment he’s been going through when the town is actually hit by a fierce storm and he and his family take refuge in his shelter. A return to a sort of normality seems possible as Curtis accepts that his irrational behaviour needs to be addressed and the family trot off on holiday to try and restore the equilibrium in their lives and their relationship. And that’s really quite enough. But ‘Take Shelter’ has to go a step too far with an ending which tends to subvert everything we’ve seen these last two hours and suggests that the conclusions we’ve slowly come to regarding Curtis and his state of mind are themselves open to question and that maybe Curtis is more than just a man with an extreme mental health condition after all.

Despite scuppering itself at the last minute, ‘Take Shelter’ is still a brave and unusual piece of film-making powered by exceptionally strong performances, a stark and thoughtful script and some memorable and occasionally-disturbing imagery. It’s well worth setting time aside for in the run-up to the Christmas blockbuster season.

Expected rating: 5 out of 10

Actual rating:

alt

Paul Mount

You May Also Like...

Get Ready for Take-Off With the SUPER WINGS: MAXIMUM SPEED Trailer

Animated TV spin-off Super Wings: Maximum Speed is heading to cinemas! Check out the trailer below… Synopsis: Young airplane Jet is proud to be the fastest in the world, but
Read More
russell crowe stars in the exorcism trailer

THE EXORCISM Trailer Stars Russell Crowe As A Haunted Actor

The first trailer for demon possession horror The Exorcism, starring Oscar winner Russell Crowe, has been released… not to be confused with the demon possession horror The Pope’s Exorcist, starring
Read More
jodie comer in the end we start from, to star in 28 years later

Jodie Comer & Aaron Taylor-Johnson Join 28 YEARS LATER

Some of Britain’s finest actors are entering the zombie apocalypse, as Deadline reports that Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Ralph Fiennes are boarding 28 Years Later. Danny Boyle is directing
Read More
jennifer lopez in atlas trailer

Full Trailer Drops For JLo-Starring Sci-Fi ATLAS

Jennifer Lopez is forced to confront her ambiguous feelings about artificial intelligence in the first official, full-length trailer for Netflix’s science-fiction feature, Atlas.  Per the official synopsis, Atlas follows Atlas Shepherd
Read More
lakeith stanfield to star in and produce film adaptation of neo noir vampire video game el paso, elsewhere

LaKeith Stanfield To Star In Film Adaptation of Vampire Video Game EL PASO, ELSEWHERE

LaKeith Stanfield, who most recently starred in Jeymes Samuel’s sophomore feature, The Book of Clarence, is teaming up with veteran producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura for El Paso, Elsewhere, an adaptation of the
Read More
the darkness outside us book illustration

Elliot Page To Adapt Sci-Fi Novel THE DARKNESS OUTSIDE US

The Darkness Outside Us is looking to move from ink and paper to the big screen, with The Hollywood Reporter announcing that Pageboy Productions, the banner run by Oscar nominee Elliot Page, Matt
Read More