Because we stick closer to Jack, Joy remains a distant, mysterious figure. That’s intentional. It was only during my second viewing of Room that I noticed that the film captured pretty accurately the feeling of what it’s like to be young and to see your parents as these tall, benevolent, unknowable, practically alien creatures. Although Joy is a very young mom—her son was conceived during one of the times Old Nick raped her—she’s meant to be a universal symbol of motherhood, especially the sacrifices and anguish that go into the job. It proves particularly ironic, then, that Joy isn’t the movie’s main character: Even in a film about motherhood, she’s a bit in the background, practically taken for granted while our concern goes to the fragile boy.

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Abrahamson’s approach twists the knife a little deeper in Room’s second half, which traces Joy’s reentry into the real world and Jack’s introduction to it. Joy reunites with her mother (Joan Allen) and father (William H. Macy), but their lives changed in the seven years since she was kidnapped, forcing their daughter to play catch-up. The friends she had in high school are never seen. Living in her childhood home with her mom and her new boyfriend (Tom McCamus), Joy is merely a prisoner in a bigger room, unable to understand why she still feels claustrophobic, trapped. And because we observe all of this from Jack’s POV, it’s almost as if it’s happening in a subplot, somewhere removed from the main action.

Why does Joy slowly implode once they’re freed from Old Nick? Room offers lots of clues without landing on any definitive answer. But the whys don’t matter: Larson makes sure we care more about the emotional aftereffects, and she’s heartbreaking as a woman who had to hold up under impossible circumstances for so long that, now that it’s over, she’s lost her bearings.

Tremblay is quite fine as the young boy, his big eyes silently taking everything in, and the movie is cunning in suggesting that Jack will have the tougher time of adjusting to the outside world. The cruel twist of Joy’s life is that she wasn’t given the choice to be a mother, she becomes one in complete solitude, and her ordeal is far more grueling than one could imagine. And still she proves to be a brave and loving parent, even after her escape and while being written into the background. It’s gets at the most poignant and tragic ideas in Room—that our society is so concerned about protecting our children that we often overlook those who have been tasked with protecting them.

Grade: B+


Grierson & Leitch is a regular column about the movies. Follow us on Twitter, @griersonleitch.

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