This story is based on a memoir written by David and Nic Sheff. Itโs about the cycle of drug abuse Nic couldnโt liberate himself from and David who tried everything he could think of to help him escape. The title, โBeautiful Boyโ comes from the John Lennon song that David (Carell) used to sing to Nic (Chalamet) when he couldnโt sleep at night be. He was singing it still when Nic was eighteen and laying on the bed passed out from the many drugs that were running through his system. They seized the boy, refusing to loosen their grip but there sits David, stroking his hair remembering the Nic he knew, certain that one day heโd return.
With this film director Felix Van Groeningen, who also had a hand in writing the script, is making available to you a world youโll find frighteningly realistic and familiar or, hopefully, one youโre blissfully ignorant of yet paralyzed by. Regardless of which it is, youโll be pleased with the presentation in every design choice heโs made to entertain and captivate you. The score is gorgeous, and the soundtrack is equally pleasing. The cinematography is such that you feel youโre experiencing how Nic feels when heโs high while concurrently reminded of what his exposure and reliance on the drugs is doing to those who love him. Weโve all seen the drug abuse movie before but not the way Van Groeningen brings it to you. David is desperate to help rescue Nic and he rummages through Nicโs things. While he does this, we watch memories of Nic in various stages of childhood run through his mind. We watch them grow close and see when Nic begins to pull away
Nic tells him that heโs tried almost every drug there is but likes methamphetamineโs the most. He goes on to say that meth makes him feel better than he has ever felt in his life. Upon hearing this, you can feel the pain ripple through David as he realizes his child prefers drugs and what they can give him to the unconditional love he has always offered.
David researches rehab facilities several times but for the most part, theyโre unsuccessful, as is Nicโs lies about getting sober. Davidโs hopes are dashed when heโs told that Nicโs particular addictions have a success rate in the single digits. In order to get to know his son more, he takes some cocaine himself and starts talking to people who use. He does everything he can to learn not only what he can understand what Nic likes so much but about whether or not itโs time to do the inevitable and let him go.
You may not like the use of flashbacks and cuts in editing that constantly take you from one stage of Nicโs life to another; one stage of Davidโs discovery to the next. It sometimes gets a little hard to keep up but itโs reasonable to assume this the impression Van Groeningen wanted to leave you with is one of nervousness, restlessness and anxiety so you could understand the Sheffโs that much more. ย
Chalamet is flawless in his take on Nic. He was fully committed to the part even using facial tics the young child actor who played him as a little boy has when on screen. I predict right now that heโll be walking up to the stage to accept an Academy Award or at the very least will be nominated for this outstanding performance. This is a very powerful and heartbreaking story. I recommend you see this as soon as humanly possible. ย
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