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'Never Let Me Go' is gorgeous and provocative

Philosophically provocative and achingly sad, "Never Let Me Go" manages to touch the mind and the heart at once, and with equal measure.Longtime video director Mark Romanek, whose last feature was the haunting "One Hour Photo" from 2002, has made a film that's sumptuously gorgeous and filled with sterling performances. The textures, the lighting — everything is carefully crafted but never stuffy
/ Source: The Associated Press

Philosophically provocative and achingly sad, "Never Let Me Go" manages to touch the mind and the heart at once, and with equal measure.

Longtime video director Mark Romanek, whose last feature was the haunting "One Hour Photo" from 2002, has made a film that's sumptuously gorgeous and filled with sterling performances. The textures, the lighting — everything is carefully crafted but never stuffy, and, at times, even a little gritty in an appealing way.

But, based on the novel by acclaimed "Remains of the Day" author Kazuo Ishiguro, "Never Let Me Go" also raises intriguing questions about medical ethics and the nature of humanity itself. Some may find its tone suffocatingly heavy, and the score can feel a bit melodramatic and intrusive here and there. But if you give into it, you'll find yourself sucked into this melancholy alternate world, an ambitious hybrid of sci-fi drama and coming-of-age romance set in a British boarding school.

That's where the tale begins in the late '70s, at the exclusive Hailsham, where headmistress Miss Emily (Charlotte Rampling) reminds the children they're special in a tone that's so stern and full of conviction, it almost sounds as if she's scolding rather than encouraging them.

Prime among the students are Kathy, Tommy and Ruth, whose tentative love triangle at age 11 will form the film's dramatic arc. Young actors Isobel Meikle-Small, Charlie Rowe and Ella Purnell are all so natural and excellently cast, they actually make the relationship more compelling at this age than the actors who will go on to portray the characters as adults. That's no small feat, given that we're talking about Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield and Keira Knightley.

In adapting Ishiguro's book, screenwriter Alex Garland ("28 Days Later") reveals the mystery of the children's unusual existence slowly and suspensefully, through details and gestures that are small and spare. We know something's different about them: their fear of leaving the school grounds, the daily pills and bottles of milk lined up for them to consume, the bracelets that monitor their comings and goings. But only after a new teacher arrives, played with subtlety and sympathy by Sally Hawkins, do we (and they) learn their true purpose.

If you haven't read the novel, there's no need to divulge their secret here. Suffice it to say it's heartbreaking, and it effectively conveys the fragility and brevity of life — so much so that we don't need the narration at the end to hammer home some themes that had already been made clear in much more graceful fashion.

But this is also what makes the relationship between these three children so urgent. Quiet, bookish Kathy and raging, impulsive Tommy may seem like unlikely friends, but as they look out for each, they realize they're probably also soul mates. Ruth inserts herself between them out of jealousy, the need to be wanted, who knows? But she tears the two apart, and keeps them apart almost permanently.

"Never Let Me Go" then jumps ahead seven years, to when they're all 18 and have left school, but they're still living a sheltered life. Only then do they begin to show a curiosity about the outside world, and their hesitant interactions with others provide the film's few glimmers of humor. Jumping ahead nine more years reveals the fate that was waiting for them all along, when words like "carer," "donation" and "completion" sadly make more sense.

As she was in her star-making, Oscar-nominated performance in "An Education," Mulligan is radiant and expressive with just the slightest of glances. Knightley is believably seductive and cruel as both friend and villain. And as the man caught between them, Garfield (star of the new "Spider-Man") has the difficult task of trying to face the future realistically, despite clinging to his adolescent innocence and instincts.

As it does of its characters, "Never Let Me Go" demands much of its audience emotionally. It's worth the investment.