Geekscape Movie Review: The Whale

Once a household name as a handsome, wide-smiling star throughout the majority of the 90s, it seemed as though Brendan Fraser’s time in the spotlight evaporated in an instant. His wildly successful starring roles in The Mummy franchise’s first two installments were almost immediately followed up by a few lesser-felt supporting roles (like in 2004’s Crash) and a collection of blockbuster blunders (including 2008’s Journey to the Center of the Earth). But how could a prominent Hollywood celebrity plunge into obscurity so quickly? Now, after more than a decade of irrelevance, Fraser returns with what has unimaginatively been coined as a “Bren-aissance” thanks to his gut-wrenching and Oscar-destined work in Darren Aronofsky’s latest character study, The Whale.

Living as a recluse in a small, one bedroom apartment and teaching online English classes over a Zoom-like app with his video eternally set to “off”, Charlie (played by Fraser) is a depressed, 600-pound man slowly eating himself to death as a penance for his loneliness. But when Charlie’s unexpectedly rescued from a heart-attack by a young, religious pamphlet-pusher (Ty Simpkins) who stumbles across his home, he uses this new opportunity in life to attempt to reconnect with his estranged daughter (Stranger Things’ Sadie Sink) from a previous marriage. Winning her affection proves difficult as Charlie continues to inch closer to his own death, despite heartfelt pleas to end this self-punishment from Liz (Hong Chau), his only friend in the world.

Director Darren Aronofsky prides himself on immersing the audience in dark and troubling stories of human suffering. From the psychological torment in his masterful thriller, Black Swan, to the sad and depressing depths of The Wrestler, these personal stories that Aronofsky brings to life become engrossing examinations of humanity’s bleakest edges. Yet, in this vast bleakness, the filmmaker’s central characters always manage to encounter a blissful pinnacle before their ultimate demise. Perhaps, in some ways, The Whale is par for the course, inherently derivative of Aronofsky’s other works but, at the same time, so completely original.

Like Natalie Portman and Mickey Rourke before him, Brendan Fraser is well on his way to another Oscar-nominated performance at the hands of Darren Aronofsky. After more than a decade of cinematic insignificance, Fraser has been thrust into the frontrunner position of the Best Actor race and deservedly so. Admittedly, his distracting fat-suit takes some time to accept, yet Fraser eventually sinks into his obtuse physical prosthetics and, more importantly, his character’s skin to deliver a handful of genuinely unforgettable onscreen moments that justify his front-runner status. Almost as comparable as Fraser’s leading turn are the performances of his co-stars, Hong Chau and Sadie Sink. Both are beyond impressive but it’s Chau’s work that feels a little more noticeable and deserving of awards season attention.

The Whale is a heartbreaking tale of emotional pain that’s caked in metaphors and imposes its will onto the viewer. Screenwriter Samuel D. Hunter adapts the story from his own 2012 stage-play of the same name and the film’s singular, enclosed setting is overcome by this enormously obese man who’s consumed by his own troubled past, creating such a suffocating and claustrophobic experience for the audience. While The Whale is imperfect in many ways, Aronofsky once again shows why he’s such a unique talent and why his work demands your viewing attention.

GRADE: 4/5