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Malcolm & Marie

An  intensely-acted romantic drama on Netflix. And it's a two-hander.

Malcolm & Marie

“It's not just about you forgetting to thank me, Malcolm. It's about how you see me. And how you view my contribution; not just to this relationship, but to your work. Specifically, in a movie you made about my life.” Marie (Zendaya)

If you’ve ever wondered why a film or play has been called a “two hander,” here’s a fine example: writer-director Sam Levinson’s Malcolm & Marie. No other actors are needed, thank you. These two, John David Washington as Malcolm and Zendaya as Marie, eat up the lines without eating up the scenery without other actors.

Living together, they wait at their lavish beach home for the reviews of his new film, whose premiere from which they have just returned. Fueled by passion, narcissism, and plain old intelligence, they argue about the authenticity of his directing and the elements of the film based on her life as a recovering addict (See quote above). Think of just Taylor and Burton in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? without the two younger characters (in fact, the name of the unseen actress in his new film is “Taylor”).

Through cycles of bitterness and love, the two characters in Malcolm define many of the important elements of art, most about the honesty of character and point of view or perspective of the artists. But underneath is the nagging is our suspicion that their solipsistic obsession with their craft keeps them from fully loving each other.

This romantic depiction of the conjunction of life and art is to be sipped like a fine Cognac, perhaps revisited to savor the brilliant script and watch two fine actors update the histrionics of Burton and Taylor into modern minimalism. Thanks, Netflix.

Malcolm & Marie

Director: Sam Levinson (Assassination Nation)

Screenplay: Levinson (Euphoria)

Cast: John David Washington (Tenet), Zendaya (Spider-Man: Far from Home)

Run Time: 1h 46m

Rating: R

John DeSando holds a BA from Georgetown University and a Ph.D. in English from The University of Arizona. He served several universities as a professor, dean, and academic vice president. He has been producing and broadcasting as a film critic on It’s Movie Time and Cinema Classics for more than two decades. DeSando received the Los Angeles Press Club's first-place honors for national entertainment journalism.