Written and directed by Paul Schrader. Acquired by Magnolia Pictures. Seen at: Venice, NYFF.
Paul Schrader is still working. This, in and of itself, would be no small feat for any filmmaker in their mid 70s, even without the extenuating circumstances of a global pandemic. But when Schrader was hospitalized with Covid-related pneumonia and breathing difficulties shortly after the world premiere of Master Gardener in Venice, it served as a sobering reminder of both his colossal impact on the American independent cinema and the risks required of him to continue making movies today, more than 40 years after the release of Taxi Driver.
This bears noting in light of Master Gardener, a film about steady, patient labor being rewarded with an eventual profusion of vivid, utopian beauty. Set on a Southern plantation where a head horticulturist (Joel Edgerton) privately atones for past sins by tending to the estate’s lavish gardens, the film blooms gradually, unfurling as the plantation’s imperious owner (Sigourney Weaver) and her troubled grand-niece (Quintessa Swindell) challenge and entrance him to unearth what he’s long kept buried.
More hopeful and quietly humorous than First Reformed and The Card Counter, Master Gardener is in many ways classic Schrader: a meditation on lived guilt, violent redemption, and the spiritually cleansing force of human connection. But in the decades-long work of revealing himself to audiences, through ideas and images that recur as motifs in his oeuvre, Schrader has also made it possible to catch vibrant variations on his established themes. It is this practice, and Master Gardener’s turn toward the light—in which facing the past might not require annihilative violence and could instead offer absolution, a second chance—that most clarifies the film’s tender beauty and cumulative power.
“Let me know when the Discourse starts on this one so I can throw my phone into the Adriatic,” snarks Bilge Ebiri from the film’s Venice world premiere, awarding it four stars. New York Film Festival responses were largely enthusiastic about this “film of collapsing contrasts: white and Black, young and old, chaos and order, love and hate,” as Brian writes. “In a lesser artist’s hands, such juxtapositions would seem banal, but Schrader makes them almost sublime.” IF