Wonder Wheel Review

Wonder Wheel
Mickey (Justin Timberlake) is a wannabe playwright who becomes involved with a carousel operator (Jim Belushi), his former actress wife (Kate Winslet) and his daughter Carolina (Juno Temple), on the run from an ill-advised early marriage.

by Helen O'Hara |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Dec 2017

Original Title:

Wonder Wheel

It’s hard to know if this colourful, stagey melodrama is meant as a tribute to or pastiche of Eugene O’Neill’s hard-scrabble plays. Perhaps it’s both. Justin Timberlake’s callow Mickey, a part-time lifeguard and full time pseudo-intellectual, starts an affair with the unhappy Ginny (Winslet). A former actress, she’s married to alcoholic Humpty (Belushi) and adjusting badly to life as a waitress. But Mickey’s eye soon strays from Ginny to her step-daughter Carolina (Temple), with predictably messy results.

Wonder Wheel

There’s a thick vein of misanthropy here that’s barely leavened by its glowing artificiality, as Ginny’s life threatens to fly apart at the seams and take her family with it, but it’s a cynicism that feels typical of late-period Woody Allen. Winslet is on extraordinary form as a woman who’s all too conscious that the male attention she has always relied upon is disappearing, but she’s significantly better and more engaging than the film around her.

The film’s glowing, golden cinematography suggests a far warmer story than it in fact delivers, but Winslet’s stunning turn is worth a look if you can stand the consciously stagey feel.
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