Fast Color movie review & film summary (2019)
"Fast Color" takes place in the near-ish future, when water is so scarce it's become the currency of the realm. The American West, as envisioned by Hart, her astonishing production designer Gae S. Buckley and cinematographer Michael Fimognari, is a near-empty wasteland, sparsely populated with roadside bars and diners, empty storefronts, lonely houses beneath a gigantic sky. Ruth (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) is first seen escaping from a warehouse and fleeing into the night. Making her way across the desert, hitching rides, Ruth has secrets. People are looking for her, tracking her movements. People from the "government." A recovering addict, Ruth also has violent seizures which appear to cause earthquakes. She's so accustomed to this "power" that when she feels a seizure coming on, she calls the motel's front desk and warns them to take cover. Such a power might prove very useful in this parched New World. What if it could be harnessed, controlled?
The opening sequences of the movie are gripping and mysterious, as Ruth—tormented by flashbacks to happier times—tries to get home to her mother Bo (Lorraine Toussaint) and her daughter Lila (Saniyya Sidney), whom Bo has raised, since Ruth had been so wild. Hart takes her time establishing the backstory, allowing space for questions and confusion. Nothing is handed to us. People don't sit around explaining themselves to one another, and these characters don't either. Some of this leads to unnecessary confusion, but confusion is sometimes preferable to exposition underlined ad nauseam. Bo is first seen smoking a cigarette out on the porch of the family home, Nina Simone's "New World Coming" drifting out of the open windows. Slowly, the cigarette dissolves into shimmering dust swirls, hovering before Bo's eyes, before swirling back into its original form. This is the first inkling that Ruth's apocalyptic seizures may not be some weird individual "power," but something inherited and passed on. Lila, a young child who barely knows her mother, has a mechanical mind, and looks longingly at Ruth's battered pickup truck, aching to get under the hood. Lila's powers are wild and undeveloped. What starts as a wary family reunion, filled with bristling tension, transforms into an event far more urgent, with heavy-duty implications for all three of them.
How this plays out is not as important as "Fast Color"'s devotion to the rhythms of life in this one family, grounding us in their dynamic, even as events become more and more supernatural. There's one beautiful stationary shot of the kitchen, with the three characters moving in and out of the frame, getting their breakfast at staggered intervals, with no dialogue. Ruth is still almost feral, fearful of hurting someone when a seizure comes on. So she camps out in the barn, a stark white structure at night, with orange lamplight gleaming into the midnight-blue, stars exploding in the sky above, a sort of Thomas Kinkade filtered through a dystopian-glamorous lens. These moments provide texture and background, atmosphere and specificity.
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