Fresh Air - ‘Schmigadoon!’ co-creator Cinco Paul satirizes Broadway
Episode Date: April 24, 2026‘Schmigadoon!’ is now on Broadway. Adapted from the Apple TV series that lovingly satirized musicals of the ‘40s and ‘50s, we’ll hear from the co-creator, co-writer and songwriter of the ser...ies, Cinco Paul, who also wrote the book and songs for the Broadway show. He spoke with Terry Gross in 2021. Also, film critic Justin Chang reviews ‘Blue Heron.’ See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Fresh Air. I'm TV critic David Bean Cooley.
Earlier this week, the musical Shmigadoon opened on Broadway to lots of applause and rave reviews.
The New York Times called it a blast, which it is. I saw it in previews last Friday and loved it.
It's also a blast from the past, a warm-hearted embrace and spoof of classic Broadway musicals,
from Oklahoma and the Sound of Music to Carousel and the Music Man.
The title Shmigadoon is a play on another musical classic, Brigadune, in which two tourists stumble upon a magical village with its own eccentric inhabitants and rules.
In Shmigadun, the tourists are a loving couple, Josh and Melissa.
They're in love, but after a few years of living together, they're also in kind of a rut.
Shmigadun originated in 2021 as a six-part miniseries on Apple TV Plus, co-created by Cinco-Pol and Ken Dario.
Sinko Paul, who wrote the music, lyrics, and book for the Broadway version, has reshaped and condensed those six TV episodes into one night of theater, but has retained all the key songs, characters, and plot twists.
The original TV version began when the two doctors, Melissa and Josh, met cute at a hospital vending machine, then jumped into bed.
On Broadway, the vending machine turns into a bed, a clever transition that saves time and makes the same.
point, only funnier.
Director and choreographer Christopher
Christopher Gatelli also choreographed
the TV version, so everything
I loved about the full ensemble
staging of such infectiously giddy
numbers as Corn Pudin
has arrived on Broadway intact.
Corn Pudin, which sets
the tone early in the show, is
confident in the way at both echoes
and winks at old musical conventions,
and that confidence
is well earned. Corn Pudin
won an Emmy for Paul that year,
for outstanding original music and lyrics.
On Broadway, Josh is played by Alex Brightman,
a Tony nominee for his starring stage roles in Beetlejuice and School of Rock.
Melissa is played by Sarah Chase from TV's Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.
Their comic timing together is flawless,
and the supporting cast features a lot of standouts.
The Apple TV Plus version of Shmigadoon was divided into two different six-episode seasons.
When they premiered,
about both. In season one, to which the Broadway musical closely adheres, Josh and Melissa
happen upon a mysterious land, but can't leave it until they find true love. When first they
cross that magical bridge into Shmigadoon, the townspeople instantly prepare to greet them
by dancing and singing. Melissa, who grew up loving musicals, is delighted. Josh is not.
On TV, Melissa was played by Cecily Strong, and Josh was played by Keegan Michael Key.
Okay, what is this?
Now, why is music coming from everywhere?
Welcome to our little town.
Where friends are all you meet.
And you will never see a frown.
Hey, everyone.
Hey there, Pete.
We bet you're wrong.
What we're probably wondering what we call.
The most beautiful, wonderful, magical grace of...
What is happening?
It must be something they do for tourists, like Colonial Williamsburg.
The second season of Shmigadoon ran two years later,
featuring most of the cast members returning in different roles.
The twist was that when Melissa and Josh returned to Shmigadoon,
it's now populated by the next generation of musicals,
typified by echoes of Sweet Charity, Chicago, Hare,
and Sweenie Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
The second season was called Schmachago,
and it featured the same cast, most of them in new roles,
which the Broadway production could blaze a new trail by emulating.
There's no reason Broadway's new hit musical in time
shouldn't have a sequel ready and waiting in the wings,
with cast members from Shmigadoon ready to sign up for Shumko.
Not for example with songs like Do We Shock You,
in which the ladies at a nightclub line up on stage,
as in Bob Fosse's sweet charity,
to sing some provocative lyrics.
Although Josh and Melissa in the audience are anything but outraged.
Do we shock you make you ill at ease?
Do we offend your tender sensibility?
Oh, trans is a man, and he's wearing a dress.
I mean, I've literally seen every season of drag race, so.
Are you two real?
In time, Schmachago may make the transition to Broadway, just as Shmigadoon has.
But for now, you can get tickets to Shmigadoon or watch both seasons on Apple TV.
Meanwhile, here's an interview Terry Gross conducted with Sinko Paul when the TV musical first premiered.
Back in 2021, when he spoke with Terry, Paul had written all the songs for the TV version of Shmigadoon,
and had co-created and co-written the series with his writing partner, Ken Dario.
Previously, the two of them had written the animated films, Despicable Me, The Secret Life of Pets,
and the Dr. Seuss adaptations, Horton Here's a Who, and the Lorax.
In the original TV version of Shmigadoon, the small town of the title looks like a stage or movie set from the early 20th.
century. The women are wearing prairie dresses with long petticoats, and the men are dressed like
they're in a barbershop quartet. It turns out that in this town, life is a musical. Let's pick up on the
scene in which Melissa and Josh, played by Cecily Strong and Keegan Michael Key, first encounter the
townspeople of Shmigadoon. The people start singing about their town, which makes Melissa
smile and Josh cringe. See if you can guess which musical inspired this particular
number.
Cinco Paul, welcome to fresh air. Thank you so much for creating this series.
Thank you for having me.
How did you come up with the idea of a musical about people trapped in a musical set
in the early 20th century?
Well, it's kind of crazy. I had the idea for this almost
25 years ago.
And it was while I was watching the movie
in American Werewolf in London,
of all things,
one of my favorite movies.
And it opens with two friends
hiking through the wilderness
and they're hiking over the countryside.
And I suddenly thought,
wow, the opening to this is very much like
the opening to Brigadoon.
And then I thought,
what if these two modern guys,
instead of stumbling on a town that has a werewolf stumbled on a town that was in a musical.
And that was the germ of the idea, but I didn't really know what to do with it.
So it was one of those that I just filed away.
But what really cracked it for me was, oh, instead of two friends, it should be a couple.
So that it is more of a romantic comedy and it can be more about what does love mean,
what's true love really mean.
I think that's why for 25 years nothing happened with it.
because it needed that addition to really crack it.
So the Cecily Strong character loves musicals,
the Keegan Michael Key character hates musicals.
Why did you want him to hate musicals?
Well, I thought it was really important.
I mean, first of all, it's really funny to have someone
who hates musicals be stuck in a musical,
but also for him to be the eyes and ears of the people,
unlike me, who don't love musicals.
And in many ways that was Ken, and in many ways it's my wife, you know.
Oh, boy, you're trapped.
I'll tell you, Ken and I, you know, played music all the time when we were writing,
and whatever a musical theater song would somehow pop up in my mix, he would say skip.
So it was really important for the show to have that perspective.
Some musicals have really corny scenes in them.
and the kind of scene that always bores me is the picnic scene,
whereas this was a real nice clam bake, I'm really glad we came.
It's like, can we skip that?
Can we skip that and get to the good stuff?
And I never really understand the function that they serve.
And you kind of have a song parodying that called corn pudding.
Yes.
And so the reason why they're singing about corn pudding is it's their first morning in town
and they're sitting on the porch and about to have breakfast.
and they're asked if they want some corn pudding,
and they don't even know what corn pudding is,
and then the town just starts singing about how great corn pudding is.
So I'd like you to talk a little bit about what you think of those moments in musicals,
where you have to sing about food or a picnic or a clam bake.
Yeah, I mean, corn pudding came out of, initially was thinking,
what is the song that is most going to annoy Keegan's character?
what would be the worst possible song to subject him to you know and it's just oh a song just about food
and corn put and sudden came to me is just it's kind of the perfect representation of these sort of songs
like the it's a real nice clam bake like who cares like you know songs really should move the story
forward in some way and they and i think the the worst example is shapoopee from music man
which is it brings everything to a grinding halt
and then this Marcellus character is just singing this nonsense song
that has nothing to do with anything.
And so that's what Quorum Putin is.
It's an ode to those songs.
But the fun thing is that ironically, in our show,
it does move the story forward
because this stupid song gets kicking to say,
okay, we're leaving.
We're not going to spend another minute in this day.
Why don't we hear corn pudding?
And we'll also hear the Cecily Strong character kind of join in a verse, much to the Kegan Michael Key character's annoyance.
I think they want us to take a break.
I'm not singing and you're not singing.
Come on, it could be fun.
No, do not.
Never had corn pudding.
Why?
And it may be a way.
But if you've got some extry.
Extry.
I sure would like a taste.
Oh, she sure would like a taste.
The music is kind of like a ho-down.
Yes.
It just reminded me, too, that when I was in school,
we had to learn some of that kind of dancing,
you know, like square dancing.
Yeah, that was part of the curriculum somehow.
Yeah, like, why are we learning this?
We live in Brooklyn.
Like, what are you thinking?
I want to get to another song.
We all know that so many people,
performers on Broadway historically have been gay. And it's only in recent years that they've been
able to be out. And it's only recently that there are actually musicals about gay people who are
out of the closet. So you have a few really funny references to like closeted gay people
in musicals. One of the really funny songs, the mayor who's played by Alan Cumming,
is secretly gay
and it's a secret he's never disclosed to anybody
and he sings a song that kind of
is a secret love kind of song
but...
Yes, where he inadvertently reveals
to Cecily's character that he's gay.
Because she has gaydar and no one in the town does.
Yes, exactly.
But the mayor's wife sings a song
that's called
he's a queer one, that man of mine.
She has no clue that he's gay.
But she knows
that, you know, he's different from the other men.
And usually in those songs, that's like, he's wonderful.
He's so different from other men.
But in this one, it's kind of like, hmm, he's so different than other men.
I want you to talk about writing this,
because this is an example of a song that I don't think closely adheres to another song.
It's a kind of, there's references to other songs in it,
including you're a queer one, Julie Jordan.
That's from Carousel, right?
That's from Carousel, yeah.
So, but talk about writing this.
and what you wanted to do with it.
Yeah, I mean, to me, there is a trope in these musicals.
Often, there's a song called Something Wonderful from King and I,
and another song from Carousel called What's the Use of Wondren?
You know, these women who sing songs where, you know,
he has maybe these flaws, but I still love him, you know.
And so I wanted to play with that.
But this is a song where she has no clue that her husband is gay,
but everything that is evidence that he's gay,
she sees as a really positive quality.
Like he doesn't look at other women.
You know, and for her, it's all these really positive qualities.
But also really, in many ways,
the mayor's story is at the heart of the show
because he is one of these characters
that back in the day could only be queer coded, you know,
but because we have modern characters in Shmigadoon now
and Cessley's character
really likes to get involved in people's lives.
She helps push him
to, you know, proclaim to the whole town
who he really is.
And Alan does such an amazing job
with this character
and really gives him depth and heart
in a way that elevates it even beyond
what I'd hoped he'd bring.
Yeah, he's great in it.
This clip will start with Cecily's strong speaking.
And I should say that the mayor's last name is Menlove.
Another little clue.
Okay, so here's, he's a queer one, and this is Anne Harada singing.
Mrs. Menlov, forgive me for asking, but how much do you really know about your husband?
That's a good question.
He's a hard man to know, it seems.
Different.
Some men love.
to fight and curse they smoke and drink and yell.
Leave you flat or even worse, they stay and make life hell.
But my man is gentle, as soft and sentimental,
as any lace adorned a valenton.
Some men stumble home at dark want dinner and dessert.
Other men have eyes that spark
at every passing skirt but my man loves cooking i've never caught him looking at other gals more young petite
or fa this was literally me in high school show me any other man more tender or expressive i only wish that nightly he were slightly more aggressive
There it is.
Sometimes it may seem like he is too good to be true.
Like there's a man that I can't see just aching to break through.
I wish I could free him, so I could finally see him the way he truly is and let him shine.
That's music from Schmigadoon, the loving satire of 40s.
in early 1950s musicals, and my guest, Sincopal, co-created the series, co-wrote it, and wrote all the songs.
Oh, that's really, it's a funny song, but it's also, it's a lovely song. It's a nice melody.
Yeah, I mean, that was the intention. I never wanted the songs to be too jokey, if that makes sense.
You know, I really wanted them, like, oh, that could genuinely have been a song sung in an undiscovered Rogers and Hammerstein.
musical. And then it ends in a very, you know, Anne does an amazing job with a song,
and it ends in a really sweet spot, right, where she sort of wishes he could be who he really is.
She suspects that he's not being his true self. She doesn't know what that actually means,
but she really wishes the best for him and loves him.
Sincol Paul speaking to Terry Gross in 2021.
Coming up, we'll continue their conversation, and film critic Justin,
Chang reviews the new film Blue Heron. I'm David B. In Cooley, and this is fresh air.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, please, no song, I'll do anything.
Guys, we're actually in the middle of something.
You can't plow a field without hitting some...
How were you first exposed to musicals? Like, where did you grow up? Did you see music theater?
Was this all through movies?
I grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, so I didn't see a lot of...
shows live but my mom really loved musicals and she had cast recordings for i specifically remember
camelot you know loving as a pretty young kid um and listening to it i was a weird kid you know singing
i wonder what the king is doing tonight in my room memorizing uh the lyrics but i remember you know
camelot in south pacific and guys and dolls and and uh hearing those a lot and and
And so that's really, that's where my love of favorite musicals began.
But also I remember singing in the rain for the first time as a kid.
And Donald O'Connor doing Make Him Laugh.
And I thought that was the greatest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
It was so funny.
And I just loved it.
So that's really where it began when I was a kid.
And then I think a real key moment was, I think I was 14 and was asked to play piano for my
high school's musical.
And it was how to succeed in business without really trying.
And that really changed everything because then suddenly that became my tribe, you know,
the theater kids and they embraced me.
And, you know, I desperately wanted to be on stage, but probably because I didn't really
belong there, they kept saying, no, but Sinka, we need you on the piano.
Please continue playing piano for us.
But that's really where it deepened into something different.
It became my community, you know.
Did you want to continue in the musical community?
Because that's not the direction you went in until now.
You know, in college, I always sort of, you know, I wanted to be on stage.
And so in college, I tried out for several musicals and didn't get in.
And I did end up playing piano for a bunch of them.
And so at some point I realized, well, maybe that's not my musicals.
thing and then I was really interested in being a pop musician. You know, I'd always written songs
from a pretty early age and so I think there was maybe a sense that, well, musical theater isn't
cool and I want to be Elvis Costello, you know, and so that's what I focus, but people would
continually tell me, oh, that sounds like something from a musical and I was really offended
I'd say like, what are you talking about?
This is rock and roll, you know.
And so I think life was telling me that that's where I belonged.
But but and then I, you know, life is just weird.
You get, you make little choices and it pulls you in different directions.
And I got pulled into screenwriting and then ended up writing all these animated movies.
And I sort of set that part of me.
aside for a while.
Can you sing a few bars
of one of your Elvis Costello-ish
songs?
Oh my goodness.
Let's see.
Of man's last mistake
and woman's first hurt
to the final heartache
from a fall to a flirt,
I won't forgive and forget anymore.
Oh my gosh.
I haven't sung that song since I was like 19.
That's a syncopal classic called Forgive and Forget.
You had a band?
Yeah, I had a band in high school,
but it was kind of like me just forcing them to accompany me for all my songs.
So it wasn't a true band in the real sense.
And then I just would do solo stuff.
You know, I learned to play a bunch of instruments
and then I'd go into the recording studio.
make albums and and really that was kind of my dream you know i wanted to be else castello randy newman
paul mccartney you know all my heroes and there was a point where i realized i got married and we were
expecting our first child and we were in north carolina at the time my wife was in med school
and the plan was always after med school we'll go to l.a and i'll pursue my music career but we're
with impending fatherhood upon me,
suddenly I started to really question,
like, what is that going to be?
And is that the life I want?
So I got the idea to apply to film school.
And I always felt very safe in academic settings.
So I thought, I'll apply to film school.
And if I get into USC or UCLA,
that'll mean that maybe that's the direction my career should go.
And I got into USC and that kind of changed everything
and got me on the screenwriting track as opposed to the pop musician track.
No, we left something out of your music career, your early music career.
You're a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints,
which most people I think know as the Mormon Church.
Your mother was a part of the church.
Your father was Catholic but not practicing.
And you got baptized, I think, after, right before or right after graduating from Yale.
No, right, yeah, right before I headed off to college.
college. Okay. And there was a musical celebrating the 150th anniversary of the church. And I think you
wrote the songs for that? I wrote everything. I wrote the book and the music and lyrics for that.
It was about a modern girl and her great, great, great grandmother who was a pioneer girl who
switched places. Gosh, that's almost a little bit like Shmigadoon, where the modern and the past are
colliding. I know. I feel like maybe I've been writing the same thing over and over my whole
career. So what was, was it a comedy? Was it serious? Was it? Yeah, it was comedy, which was,
you know, sort of very different. Usually these productions are pretty serious, you know,
and reverential and a funny look at, you know, this, it was two fish out of water scenarios, right?
They both switched places with each other. But, you know,
It was only a couple of performances, but it was really well received.
And the biggest thing that happened in that was that's where I met my writing partner, Ken, Dario.
He auditioned and was in the show.
He, unlike me, as someone who belongs on stage.
And we became friends.
We formed a band.
And then at some point, I said, let's write a script together.
And that changed everything.
Beginning back to the musical that you did for the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day,
what was the reaction in the church to the musical?
Everybody really liked it.
It got a bunch of laughs because I think people just weren't used to
seeing one of these productions and have it be really a comedy at its heart.
And so they actually, like seven years later, they revived it.
So I've had a revival of a musical.
And they did it again seven years later.
But haven't done it since then.
It's just sort of been languishing.
Sinko Paul, speaking with Terry Gross in 2021.
More after a break, this is fresh air.
So you and your writing partner, Ken Dario, used to sing your pitches when you were pitching a film idea.
So please, you must sing one of your pitches.
Well, see, that, I mean, we wouldn't sing the pitch, right?
We wouldn't say, this is a story about a guy.
guy, you know, who is, you know, in trouble with the law.
No, that would be a nightmare.
We would have been kicked out of everybody's office.
But we would sing in our pitches like there were a musical moment.
And we would often put a musical moment in our stories.
So it was a moment, you know, I guess you'd call it non-diagetic,
when people are singing as part of the story.
So we would generally sing that.
Can you give us an example?
We were pitching our take on a movie called Car Wars
about two rival car dealers
and one becomes friends with the other.
And so he would sing to him,
You are so beautiful to me.
And so it was kind of a schick we do.
So I would generally sing to Ken
and Ken would play the person being very uncomfortable with being sung to.
And then I would sing the song to him and we'd sort of play off the comedy of that,
which I guess is in many ways a lot of the comedy that's in Shmigadoon.
But it was fun because I would always push it further than we had ever done in rehearsal
during the actual pitch meeting.
And we would play with each other in that way.
There was a lot of improv, you know, in our pitches because we had a partner there.
And so that's often how the musical part of it would play out.
Let me ask you about Despicable Me.
And this is a character who's competing to be the worst villain in the world.
And he's not that great of a villain, really.
So he's going to try to steal the moon.
And what he's done is like, you know, he stole a replica of the Eiffel Tower.
and a replica.
And the Statue of Liberty from Vegas.
Yeah, a replica from Vegas, like a souvenir, basically.
How did you come up with the idea for this?
Well, the original idea came from a Spanish animator named Sergio Pablo.
Who had pitched Chris Melodendry the idea of a villain who adopted three little girls in order to pull off a heist.
and so Chris then pitched that to me and Ken
and instantly we fell in love with the idea
and it was really the broadest of concepts
I think that Sergio would come up with
and so then it was up to us to flesh it out
and you know come up with
because I don't think the moon was part of that story
and so that's where it started
but then you know it was it was our job
to write the complete story
and come up with all the characters.
And you created the minions,
which are these, like, animated henchmen.
Would you describe what they look like
for anyone who hasn't seen the film?
If there are people out there
who have not, you know, been exposed to minions,
you know, more power to you.
Yeah, they kind of took over.
They're like these little yellow pill-like creatures
that have goggles on either their two or one,
you know, single-up.
eyes and they wear blue overalls.
And really, I have to give much of the credit for the minions to Pierre Cofin, who is the director.
And he really came up with that design and the concept.
Ken and I wrote that Gru had minions, but it was really Pierre who came up with the
concept.
And he does all the voices for the minions as well.
Was there a whole lot of minions merch?
It's interesting when the first movie came out,
we couldn't get anyone to, you know, make toys or anything.
They, like, tried everywhere, and no one was interested.
And then suddenly the movie came out and, you know,
was a surprise hit and the minions took off.
And then suddenly, you know, everybody was knocking down their door.
But initially, it's funny.
No one was interested.
but now they're everywhere, unfortunately.
My apologies.
Does that make more money than the movie even does?
I don't know because, you know, we don't see any of that money in animation.
You don't see the merch money? No.
We don't get residuals from the movies in animation.
It's kind of a pet peeve of mine, and I feel like it's unfair and not right
because it takes as much work to write an animated movie.
It takes more, actually, than to write a live act.
action movie, but you're not protected by the Writers Guild.
Why is that? Why aren't you in the Writers Guild?
It's a long story, but really, you know, when animations started out, they didn't have
writers. And so it's never fallen under the auspices of the Writers Guild.
There's people pushing for it and trying to make it happen.
And I think in TV animation, they've gotten more power for animation writers.
But it's one of those things that if the studio doesn't have to give it, they won't.
And so you can imagine there's a lot of money that Ken and I could have gotten from these movies that we have not because we don't get residuals.
Wow, that's just really shocking to me. I had no idea. Is that one of the reasons why you're kind of done for now with animation?
Not really because I know it sounds super corny, but it really was never about the money for me, you know?
But for me, we were doing all these sequels,
and I just was not interested in that
and really wanted to stretch some other muscles,
particularly the songwriting muscle.
And so that's really why I decided to leave.
What are some of the movies and some of the cartoons that you grew up with?
The first cartoon I saw that really impacted me, I think, was The Jungle Book.
I loved that movie so much.
The songs in that are so good.
And then I have to say the Marx Brothers have played a huge role in my life.
I'm sure that's why I ended up writing movies.
I saw my first Marks Brothers movie when I was 10 on TV,
and I fell in love with the Marks Brothers and became obsessed.
And that really led to my love of movies and reading about movies
and then starting to make my own with our family's Super 8 camera,
which we'd gotten for home movies, you know, on vacation.
And suddenly I used it just to make movies with all the neighborhood kids.
You love movies.
And you and your writing partner, Candario, have a podcast.
Is this still going on in your podcast?
Yeah, it's called Make Him Watch It.
And we make each other watch a movie we've never seen before.
Then you have a couple of episodes where you share your opinions of films of the 80s and films of the 90s.
but I want to play the theme song from this because I think it's you and Ken actually singing the song
It is I wrote the song
Oh you wrote the song and so in the spirit of turning your life into a musical
I just want to play the opening theme from your podcast Make Him Watch It
Make Him Watch It
There's lots of movies Ken hasn't seen
Some Cinco hasn't seen too
So now that there's COVID-Nanxed
I really love we're going to do
We're going to make him watch it
For a
We can't wait to make him watch it
With Cinco and Ken
I really love that
It's so like vaudeville era
Did you
How were you introduced to music of that period?
I mean it probably came
From my love of the Marx brothers
You know
And you know
A lot of their movies were kind of musicals
you know the coconuts animal crackers horse feathers has a lot of songs in it so so i think that led to
my love of these 1920s songs you know the tin pan alley stuff and from the time i was a weird little
kid Terry had to say like to be a 10 or 11 year old kid obsessed with that sort of music was very
odd but i just i loved it from an early age well listen congratulations on shmigadoon please do a season
to, and it's been great to talk with you.
From your mouth to God's ears.
Terry, I have to say it is so meaningful to me that you like the show and that you responded
to it like this.
Thank you so much.
Sinko Paul, speaking with Terry Gross in 2021.
You can stream both seasons of Shmigadoon on Apple TV.
Paul wrote the book, music, and lyrics for the current production of Shmigadoon,
now on Broadway.
After a break, Justin Chang reviews the new film Blue Heron.
This is fresh air.
Our film critic, Justin Chang, recommends Blue Heron,
the first feature from the writer-director Sophie Romvary.
It's a semi-autobiographical drama
that touches on Romvari's childhood in British Columbia
and her family's experience of tragedy.
The film has won numerous prizes at international film festivals
and is now playing in select U.S. theaters.
Here is Justin's review.
There have been countless coming-of-age movies about the summer that changed everything,
a season marked by a move to a new town, a fleeting but memorable romance, or a shattering crisis.
It's not easy to make a film in this vein that feels fresh or personal,
but the Canadian writer-director Sophie Romvary has somehow done both with her exquisite, achingly sad debut feature, Blue Heron.
It's based on events from her own life, which she previously explored in her 2020 documentary short, still processing.
That title could just as well have applied to Blue Heron, in which she peers back into her past and tries to make sense of what she finds.
Most of the story takes place over one summer in the late 1990s.
Eight-year-old Sasha, played by Elul Guvain, has just moved with her Hungarian,
immigrant parents and three older brothers to a small town on Vancouver Island.
Life here is idyllic in many ways. The island is beautiful and peaceful, and Sasha enjoys
spending time outdoors with her family and making new friends. But a cloud hovers over everything
and seems to darken as the summer goes on. Sasha's oldest brother, Jeremy, played by Edique Beddows,
isn't adjusting well to the move, to put it mildly.
He's peevish with his parents and siblings,
and acts out in ways that range from annoying to dangerous.
He climbs up on the roof.
He wanders off without telling anyone.
He shoplifts and gets arrested.
In one relatively mild instance of misbehavior,
Jeremy lies down on the front porch one afternoon,
keeping so still that a neighbor calls the house,
alarmed that he might be dead.
No. No, I appreciate it.
Yeah, yeah. No, I'm with you. Yes, yeah.
Who was that?
Jason from across the street. He wanted to let us know that our son is dead on the front step.
Oh, shit.
I told him we are aware, and not to worry, he will come back to life soon.
Sasha's parents are sensitively played by Adam Tompa and Eringo Rati,
who show us a loving marriage that's come under all kinds of strain.
There's Jeremy, of course, but there are also the challenges of settling into a new home
in a still fairly new country.
Sasha's father spends a lot of time working on his computer,
and his wife is frustrated at having to do most of the housework and child-rearing.
But Romvari doesn't exaggerate these pressure points.
nor does she overplay Jeremy's behavior.
The film is meticulous about showing the family's genuinely happy times,
including those rare moments when Jeremy cracks a smile and comes out of his shell.
It's as if Romvari wants to be fair to Jeremy to not let his diagnosis of oppositional defiant disorder define him.
In time, though, as Jeremy keeps acting out, the situation becomes untenable,
and a social worker, one of many professionals brought into help,
recommends that Jeremy be sent away.
In its dramatic restraint and psychological insight,
Blue Heron reminded me of two exceptional recent films about parents and kids,
Afterson and Janet Planet,
both of which were also partly inspired by their director's childhoods.
Romvari's film is the most carefully constructed memory piece I've seen in some time.
You get the sense that she's trying to put together what she remembers as precisely as she can,
right down to the clunky 90s windows interface on Sasha's dad's computer.
Rambari treats the camera as an instrument of subjectivity.
For the most part, we see mainly what Sasha sees and how she sees it.
Key moments are glimps from odd, oblique angles.
Events that Sasha never witnessed, or perhaps forgot, are not dramatized at all.
At times the camera pans idly from left to right, a movement that simulates the act of sifting through the past.
At roughly the halfway mark, Blue Heron makes a daring leap.
Suddenly we are following an older version of Sasha, played by Amy Zimmer, who is now, like Romvari, a filmmaker, keen to make sense of her family history.
But the way she goes about it triggers a surprising twist that gently toys with our sense of time.
and reality.
In asking what she, or anyone, could have done differently,
Romvari laments the imperfections of memory,
the effects of mental illness,
and the limitations of even the most loving family.
This beautiful and perceptive film
feels like something summoned from deep within her consciousness
and piped directly into ours.
Film critic Justin Chang reviewed the new film,
Blue Heron by Sophie Romvary.
On Monday's show,
actor, writer, and carpenter
Nick Offerman. He stars in the
new critically acclaimed TV show Margot's
Got Money Troubles, based on the
popular book of the same name.
Offerman won an Emmy Award for
his work on the series The Last of Us,
and he's best known for playing Ron
Swanson on the comedy Parks and Recreation.
I hope you can join us.
To keep up with what's
on the show and get highlights of our interviews,
follow us on Instagram at
NPR Fresh Air. You can subscribe to our YouTube channel at YouTube.com slash this is Fresh Air.
We're rolling out new videos with in-studio guests, behind-the-scenes shorts, and iconic
interviews from the archive.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger. Our senior producer today is Thea Challenge.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham, with additional engineering support
by Joyce Lieberman and Julian Hertzfeld.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Chorok, Anne-Marie Baldinado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Susan Yacundi, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nestor.
For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm David Beancool.
