By Amanda Gilmore
Ava DuVernayâs poetic and essential Origin is one of the yearâs best. The esteemed Director merges Isabel Wilkersonâs life along with her research to create an inspired adaptation of the Authorâs New York Times Bestseller Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents.Â
DuVernayâs focus on Wilkersonâs private life, specifically her losses and grief the years before she began her research, makes Origin part biopic part historical chronicle. In chronicling her life, the audience has a linear storyline to follow while travelling back and forth in time to witness the atrocities that happened.
We open on the last night of Trayvon Martinâs life. It was that horrific nightâs 911 calls that initiated Wilkersonâs research. From there we witness the loss of her husband and mother within a year. As she heals, she throws herself into her research. Travelling to Germany and India in search of connections between caste systems there and America.
With each stop Wilkerson makes she learns the connection between each country both presently and historically. DuVernayâs powerful, unsettling images capture the horrors the caste system creates. She delivers distressing moments of the Holocaust, the inhumanity inflicted on the Dalits in India and lynchings in America. These impactful images will haunt audiences long after viewing and visualising the research Wilkerson wrote about in her novel.
Overall, Origin is a captivatingly beautiful and heartbreakingly necessary film that holds one of the yearâs most enrapturing performances from Aunjanue Ellis.
Origin screens at TIFF â23:
Monday, September 11 at 2 PM at Roy Thompson Hall
Wednesday, September 13 at 2:30 PM at Visa Screening Room at the Princess of Wales Theatre
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