THE ROSES : THE THORNS ARE PRICKLY

Its a confounding bit of cinema  as it’s nearly impossible  to describe 105 minutes of watching  people  fight as enjoyable…and yet, with Olivia Colman and Benedict  Cumberbatch at it’s centre, it’s not entirely  unpleasant, either.

Isn’t  escapism  one of the main reasons we go to cinemas, to forget  our own troubles and enjoy the stylised lives of those  on the giant screen?

THE ROSES offers no such salve from Australian writer Tony McNamara  whose script  has the two leads trade insults and barbs, sabotage each other’s livelihood and mutually  destroy the gorgeous  seaside mansion they’ve built together.  Director  Jay Roach tries to add humour  with the presence  of friends, Barry (Andy Samberg) and Amy( Kate McKinnon).

It’s akin to a tinderbox  of resentments and competition under the facade  of a picture perfect couple. Theo(Cumberbatch) and Ivy’s (Colman) ten-year marriage  starts to fail when communication breaks down, and they find themselves  at very different  stages  of life. When they first met, he was an architect  tired of making dull London  blocks of flats and she was a chef who felt her creativity  was being  held back in the kitchen.  It was lust at first sight,  and the duo moved to California  to pursue their  careers and raise two kids.

THE ROSES  introduce us to a couple in the midst of a profane  therapy session.  They insult every personality trait possible,  obliterating  the way the other  looks,  loves and lives their  lives. After  the barrage  of insults, the pair laugh as if bitter resentment  is a totally normal  way to interact  with one’s spouse.  The main source  of Ivy’s and Theo’s problems is their  opposing shift in career prospects. As his work life tanks, hers is on the rise.

Without losing the slapstick  humour,  THE ROSES has a lot to say about the guilt mother’s feel working away from home, men struggling  when they’re  not the breadwinners,  and fathers feeling  emasculated  when taking on the childrearing roles. While the screenplay  backs away before it gets too preachy and earnest, parents  will likely  see themselves  in the arguments  between the pair.

Cumberbatch  and Colman  make it believable,  their  jokes ricocheting  off one another  with delightful, rancorous  buoyancy.  As Theo, Cumberbatch  has just  enough  edge; he doesn’t  suffer fools, which is why  he loves Ivy. Colman  plays Ivy’s with bubbly vitality  that can be great fun one minute  and as explosive as a shaken champagne  bottle the next.

THE ROSES  is funny, but there’s  something  piercing  about it too. We know these two are right  for each other,  for the long haul; why can’t they see it? But their problems  are also so universal  that watching  them struggle  is weirdly comforting.

The open-ended conclusion of THE ROSES may be the best thing about it. Ivy’s and Theo’s  love will transcend  time, even if it ends up tearing them apart.

Maybe don’t head out on date night to see this film.

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