Paul Bettany takes the director’s chair in the hard-hitting powerful movie “Shelter”
Best known to worldwide audience as Jarvis/Vision in the blockbuster
Marvel movies “The Avengers,” “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” and in the upcoming
“Captain America: Civil War,” Paul Bettany, who has also rendered an
unforgettable performance in “A Beautiful Mind,” takes the director’s chair in
his (directorial) debut in the movie “Shelter” which he also wrote, about two
homeless people and their harrowing plight to survive.
“Shelter” stars
Bettany’s wife, Jennifer Connelly opposite Anthony Mackie, who has also
appeared in “Avengers” movies as Sam Wilson aka Falcon. In “Shelter” Connelly takes on the character
of Hannah while Mackie stars as Tahir.
Both come from two different worlds. But when their lives intersect,
they’re at the same place: homeless on the streets of New York.
Bettany’s
directorial debut is a love letter to the great New York dramas of the 1970s, “Shelter”
is an unmerciful story of loss, love, sacrifice, redemption and, ultimately,
hope.
“The germ of the
idea for Shelter came from two seemingly unrelated places. First, I wanted to
explore the concept of loss. And how we respond to it. Someone you love is
there one day, and then they’re gone,” introduces Bettany of his concept for
the film.
At the backdrop
of New York, Connelly as Hanna is a heroin addict and wanders the streets day
in, day out begging for money while holding out a sign that says ‘I used to be
someone.” Nigerian immigrant Tahir whose
visa has already expired performs on the streets drumming on plastic buckets to
draw people in to drop in coins and bills.
Their lives began to intertwine when Tahir spies his stolen jacket
around her waist and eventually saves her from killing herself.
In a review from The
List (UK) by Eddie Harrison, he notes that the role of Connelly is happening in
real life. “Connelly’s captivating work elevates the material several notches;
radiating both desperation and hope in equal measure, Hannah’s situation is
heartbreaking and real, and a scene where she cleans herself up after a degrading
act of sexual violence is utterly indelible,” he states.
Bettany further
notes that the movie’s theme also touches on the brutal part of being human. “So
I wanted to write a film that spoke to loss, and I wanted to focus on two
characters, from as different backgrounds as possible—there is conflict
inherent in that—whose back- stories are slowly revealed over the course of the
film. Two characters whose present is so complicated by past loss, that their
future is always in doubt.”
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