Connect with us

Entertainment

Thelma Review – IGN

Published

on

Thelma Review – IGN

It’s a good week to be June Squibb, and to be a fan of June Squibb. The 94-year-old stage and screen veteran can be heard (if not exactly seen) in the biggest movie in the world right now – yes, that’s her as the wistful, sentient embodiment of nostalgia in Inside Out 2. Delightful as this voice-acting cameo is, it’s something of an appetizer for a fuller meal arriving in theaters today: the gentle, quirky indie comedy Thelma, which offers Squibb the first leading role of her 30-plus-year movie career. It’s a pleasure to see a character actress who’s worked with such heavy-hitters as Martin Scorsese, Alexander Payne, and Todd Haynes finally step into the spotlight – even if the movie itself is a cutesy trifle a little too tickled by its own geriatric spin on a revenge movie.

Squibb’s character, Thelma Post, is an elderly widow getting by pretty well on her lonesome. Not that she’s really alone. Her grandson, twentysomething Danny (Fred Hechinger), is a mensch who checks on her often; the movie opens with him patiently showing her how to check her email. Writer-director Josh Margolin (making his feature debut) uses these early scenes to efficiently establish Thelma as a self-reliant woman not ready to sacrifice her independence. “I fall down, I’m toast,” she tells Danny. “So I don’t fall down.”

Continue Reading