Eye For Film >> Movies >> Bleeding Love (2023) Film Review
Bleeding Love
Reviewed by: Richard Mowe
There is an added piquancy not to mention salacious interest to Emma Westenberg’s debut feature with the knowledge that her two leads Ewan McGregor and daughter Clara have been inspired to a degree by their own occasionally troubled real-life relationship.
The emotional wounds as they set off together on a road trip across the wide open vistas of the New Mexico landscapes swiftly become apparent.
The characters remain unnamed for no particular good reason and their individual backgrounds tend to be sketchy. He’s a landscape gardener and she is struggling with addictions as well as her father’s second spouse.
At a stopover we hear him looking for a place for her in a rehab centre. It emerges that she has just been in hospital after an overdose of pills. Along the way they meet an oddball assortment of characters who punctuate the journey with Kim Zimmer as tow-truck driver; her nephew, played by Jake Weary, in a birthday party clown outfit and Vera Bulder as a street worker with dreams of a better life.
The acting and the visuals are of the highest order, especially given the sensitive and personal nature of some of the revelations such as when a phone call comes from her father’s young son which definitely could have painful real-life echoes.
Westenberg has the courage of her convictions and knows how to play the fiction versus the reality in the performances of the duo. They are dutifully complicit in the arrangement which gives the film added intrigue and fascination.
You do not need, however, the full back story to appreciate going along for the ride with both McGregors belting out Leona Lewis’s hit Bleeding Love with unrestrained gusto in one of the more memorable sequences.
The film is a tad uneven in the narrative drive but compensates by its no-holds barred dissecting and reforging of family bonds.
Reviewed on: 02 Jul 2023