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« Yes No Maybe So: Ammonite | Main | Almost There: Jim Carrey in "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" »
Tuesday
Aug252020

The New Classics: Moonlight

By Michael Cusumano 

Scene: Kevin and Black at the Diner
We consider Trevante Rhodes’s Black carefully throughout the last act of Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight, searching for traces of the younger versions of his character. That we don’t find many is not surprising considering how we’ve seen this child get battered and abused by life. Chiron doesn’t grow from segment to segment so much as he transforms as survival demands. Moonlight’s second movement ends on such a violent act of self-annihilation, we should be surprised to spot any remnant of the adolescent in Black when he walks into Kevin’s diner a decade later. 

And yet despite the intimidating presence Black developed as a barrier against the world, the aspect that unmistakably connects him with his teenage self, and to Little before that, is his fragility. All his outward defenses - the bulked up physique, the sullen manner - hang on him like an ill-fitting suit of armor. When he is in the presence of Andre Holland’s Kevin it looks like a stiff breeze would blow him over...


I’ve read criticism that it strains believability that Ashton Sanders’ skinny, bullied Chyron transforms into the imposing Trevante Rhodes. Besides being factually off-base (of course he could and likely would make such a metamorphosis to make it through Juvenile Hall) such complaints miss the point. If reconciling the ages was easy the viewer wouldn’t have to engage with the negative space between them. And Moonlight’s power lives in those time jumps. The ellipses between Moonlight's segments force us to ponder how a single act of kindness or violence can ripple and expand through the decades. And how those influences produced this lonely man sitting anxiously in the diner. 

The adage says taking away strengthens what is left behind. Moonlight pares down to such a degree you would swear you could see the air molecules shift between Black and Kevin as each casual statement nudges the conversation’s temperature just so. In this heightened atmosphere Barbara Lewis's “Hello Stranger” drifting out of a jukebox becomes something more than background music. I’m reminded of Amadeus when Salieri describes a piece of music as containing “such longing, such unfulfillable longing.” Writers fall back on words like chemistry to describe scenes like this, but somehow that feels inadequate to the delicate intensity Jenkins and his actors summon here. Witchcraft is more like it.

Throughout Moonlight, Jenkins catches the characters in portrait shots, the actors looking directly into the camera in moments that seem to expand time. It happens here when Kevin realizes who is standing in his diner. In life, there are the moments that you forget almost as they are happening, and then there are the moments that imprint on you, that you carry with you as long as you live. These portrait shots feel like watching a moment cross the boundary from the first category to the second.

Black’s hunger is so intense it drowns out the other business that might otherwise clutter a scene like this. There are no emotional monologues, no desperate declarations of love. You might expect Kevin’s youthful betrayal of Chiron to be the scene's focus but it is waved off with a few words. Jenkins and the actors access a much deeper need. When you’re next to the person who represents the one romantic interlude you’ve ever had, and to your excitement you find that spark still exists, well, next to that every other feeling shrinks to nothing, doesn’t it? 


Scratch the intoxicating atmosphere of the diner scene and you find rock solid screenwriting that forces its protagonist to a character-defining choice. It’s all about the repeated shots of the door. Jenkins is careful to have a nice bright bell direct our attention back to it throughout the scene. Everything builds to one question: Will Black flee or will he put his heart on the line? 

We would understand if Black’s days of taking emotional risks were behind him. In both earlier segments a miserable and isolated Chiron finds a connection and both times that connection is betrayed. He finds a father figure in Juan only to find Juan supplying the drugs which are poisoning his mother’s soul. Later, miraculously, he finds physical intimacy with Kevin only to have Kevin join his persecutors. As the diner conversation continues, we sense Black eyeing the exit.

I suppose it would have been satisfying in a beautifully sad way if Kevin returned to the table to find Black gone. The film certainly would have earned such a moment. Jenkins is a student of Wong Kar Wai and knows the power of leaving a love story unrequited. The fact that Black stays moves me like few things in film.


Moonlight is currently streaming on Netflix. 
Follow Michael on Twitter and Letterboxd. More episodes of The New Classics.

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Reader Comments (23)

Beautiful write up of this beautiful scene, which I think is the crucial element in cementing an already great film into classic territory. For everything that came in the chapters before or even considering how this last chapter of the film begins, I don't think it prepares you for the full pivot towards romance. That bell rings to signal the beginning and end of one of the most swoon-worthy sequences I've ever seen. That it happens so beautifully between these men, in this movie, is just one of the reasons why Moonlight is so damn special.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterVal

We talk about the same scenes in the same movies over and over again.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPhil Connors

Thanks for this: It's my favorite scene in my favorite movie.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterdtsf

I love that scene. I love the little details of him getting rid of his grill. The usage of the music where Chiron travels to Florida is a homage to the film Happy Together by Wong Kar-Wai as I was like... ahh!!! A truly great film that deserved the Best Picture Oscar and goddamn those who fucked up with the envelope.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterthevoid99

For anyone loving this articl I would like to point out that u should follow Michael on twitter because he posted THE MOST HILARIOUS PROMO FOR THIS ARTICLE -- follow here.

August 25, 2020 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

Great article for an amazing scene of an excellent film. The twitter promo was in poor taste.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterRyan T.

i did not connect with this movie at all. Then again the same happened with Brokeback, and years later, i watched it again to discovered its greatness. Here's hoping to the same.
G

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterG.ShaQ

Such a beautiful and intoxicating scene. Nicely written.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMax

So glad you picked this scene - it rounds out the film so perfectly, and is the one I think of the most often.

And yes, it's got Wong Kar-Wai's imprint all over it...but that is never a bad thing.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterLynn Lee

I’m glad TheVoid99 built one this article’s mention of Wong Kar-Wai by pointing out the use of “Cucurucucu Paloma.” It’s also used by Almodovar in that iconic scene of “Talk to Her” (even featuring Caetano Veloso!!). Barry Jenkins is no dummy, and the song choice wasn’t by accident. Instead that trio of films make it one of the most important songs to queer cinema I can think of.

August 25, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterRV

This article is so wonderfully written, and it makes me want to rewatch this scene all over again. And A+ gag in the original link.

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