New Jersey Stage Issue 54 | Page 22

ography to prove Fonny’s inno- cence - he was arrested in an area of New York he couldn’t possibly have gotten to at that time if he had been involved in the assault - but nobody wants to listen to reason from two young black kids in ‘70s New York. With Fonny be- hind bars awaiting trial, Tish and her mother Sharon (Regina King) embark on a crusade to have his name cleared. The premise may make If Beale Street Could Talk sound like a le- gal drama, but it’s actually much more of a romance. In fact, it’s one of the most romantic movies to come out of American cinema in quite some time. Jenkins devotes the bulk of his film to Fonny and Tish in the weeks leading up to the former’s arrest, his camera sim- ply hanging out with them as they bask in each other’s presence, and he really sells the sense that these two people belong together. The more we see of the happi- NJ STAGE - ISSUE 54 ness Fonny and Tish bring one another, the more ominous the film becomes, reflected in Nicho- las Brittell’s stunning Jazz influ- enced score, which like Bernard Herrmann’s work on Taxi Driver, takes the soothing warmth of Jazz and occasionally corrupts it with a brooding undercurrent. The sug- gestion is that moments of beauty should be savoured, for darkness is never far away. There are few things more affect- ing in movies than moments of human kindness. In a time when doing so took even more bravery than today, three white people come to the aid of Fonny and Tish in their own ways - a young law- yer (Finn Wittrock) who takes a personal interest in Fonny’s case, a young landlord who rents out a loft to the couple when nobody else would, and an elderly Eastern European woman who intervenes when a cop (Ed Skrein) attempts to arrest Fonny for defending his INDEX NEXT ARTICLE 22