Familiar Touch review: Chalfant shines in subtle dementia drama

Familiar Touch review: Chalfant shines in subtle dementia drama

7 reported

The Guardian reports that "Familiar Touch," a debut narrative feature from writer-director Sarah Friedland, follows elderly Ruth as she adjusts to moving into a retirement community. The film reveals that Ruth has significant short-term memory loss, though she can still recall recipes from her time as a professional cook. Friedland drew from her own experience with relatives and people with dementia she worked with in a care home. The film’s focus on bodies and sensation connects to Friedland’s background as a choreographer. The review notes that the film does not treat Ruth’s cognitive shift as a tragedy or loss of self. Kathleen Chalfant, described as an American stage icon, gives what the reviewer calls an astonishingly nuanced performance.

What’s reported

The film follows elderly Ruth as she adjusts to moving into a retirement community.
Ruth has significant short-term memory loss but can still recall a recipe for borscht.
Ruth was once a professional cook and takes over plating food in the home’s kitchen.
Writer-director Sarah Friedland drew from her own experience with relatives and people with dementia she worked with in a care home.
The film’s focus on bodies and sensation connects to Friedland’s work as a choreographer.
The review states the film does not treat Ruth’s cognitive shift as a tragedy or loss of self.
Kathleen Chalfant plays Ruth and is described as giving an astonishingly nuanced performance.

Key figures

Kathleen Chalfant: actress playing Ruth
Sarah Friedland: writer-director
H Jon Benjamin: actor playing Steve
Carolyn Michelle Smith: actress playing Vanessa
Andy McQueen: actor playing doctor Brian

Sources: The Guardian

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