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Archipelago

Joanna Hogg GB, 2010, 114 min
Cast Tom Hiddleston, Lydia Leonard, Kate Fahy
Spoken language English
Subtitles English

How do you distill a family portrait from uncomfortable silences? This must have been the question Joanna Hogg asked herself before beginning ARCHIPELAGO. In this film, a holiday home serves as the stage for a stifling family reunion. Edward (a young Tom Hiddleston) is about to leave for Africa, and his mother and sister have organized this getaway as a farewell. But as they wait for a father who never arrives, the holiday atmosphere dissolves into a restless, bored anxiety.

In her second feature, Hogg already displays her signature, uncompromising style: static long takes, a complete absence of score, and an almost clinical observation of social rituals. The family members drift awkwardly through the house, trapped in a web of polite British decorum and suppressed frustrations. When the tension finally boils over, it brings no catharsis; the outbursts simply ebb away.

ARCHIPELAGO is a razor-sharp portrait of people who lack the language for true intimacy. Or more accurately: the film functions like the painting in ARCHIPELAGO that has been removed from the wall. The object itself may be gone, but its silhouette remains as a faint discoloration on the wallpaper. It is the tangible presence of an absence—of the father who isn’t there, and of the love they are too afraid to voice.

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