A Month of Sundays is the third film from writer/director Matt Saville, and is something of a change of pace. His first two films were the multi-award winning Noise and Felony, both character driven police dramas that explored themes of guilt, responsibility, family and secrets. A Month of Sundays is a more introspective drama about a man undergoing a midlife crisis who gets a new lease on life after he meets an elderly woman. It deals with universal themes of family, loss, grief, dysfunctional relationships, the dream of owning your own home, and a variety of complex mother/son relationships.
Then he receives phone call from the elderly Sarah (Julia Blake), who has accidentally rung his number when trying to call her own son. Intrigued by their brief conversation and the sense of comfort it briefly provided, Frank arranges to meet Sarah and through her he explores his own grief and emotional confusion. His presence soon proves an irritant to her real son Damien (Donal Forde). But eventually Sarah’s wisdom and life experiences eventually help snap Frank out of his ennui and he begins to reconnect with the world around him.
But unfortunately this earnest and well meaning but contrived melodrama is the lesser of Saville’s three films. It is uneven in both tone and pacing. There are problems with the script and the characterisation as we don’t really identify with some of the characters here or even care that much about them.
Veteran cinematographer Mark Wareham (BoyTown) makes good use of the leafy tree lined suburban streets of Adelaide and gives the film a strong sense of location and a strong visual surface.
LaPaglia is good at conveying the fragility and vulnerability of the male psyche and he does a good job here. A nice touch sees Frank describe every location he enters in terse real estate terms. Although 79, Blake is still a formidable screen presence and she brings gravitas to her role as Sarah. But the best moments of the film centre around Frank’s shifty boss Philip (a scene stealing performance by comic John Clarke), a shifty hustler with a heart of stone. Clarke brings his usual dry, deadpan wit to the role and I wanted more of his character and less of the melodramatic stuff about dysfunctional families and midlife crises that we have seen in numerous other similarly themed films.
But overall A Month of Sundays is a rather trite and pedestrian affair that will struggle to resonate with a wider mainstream audience.
Director: Matthew Saville
Cast: Anthony LaPaglia, Justine Clark, Julia Blake and John Clarke
Release Date: 28 April, 2016
Rating: PG – Mild themes and coarse language
Greg King
David Edwards is the editor of The Blurb and a contributor on film and television