“Mare of Easttown”–Living with the Unacceptable
Mare of Easttown, a seven-episode HBOMax mini-series, we watch a mother, Mare Sheehan (the remarkable Kate Winslet) attempting to come to terms with her unexpressed and unresolved grief over the death of her young adult son, Kevin. She is also a detective living in Easttown, a working-class suburb of Philadelphia, who is investigating the murder of an adolescent single mother, Erin McMenamin.
Mare is a local hero, a high-school basketball champion dating back 25 years. She now has multiple setbacks and tragedies to deal with: an unsolved missing case of a young girl, a divorce, her judgmental mother, her grief-stricken and wounded daughter Siobhan, a professor boyfriend, her best friend’s suspicions, and an ex- addict ex-daughter-in-law battling for custody of Mare’s grandson. The multiple characters demand focus and attention to detail in order to understand the mystery and the jaw-dropping final scene.
In this merciless seesaw of harrowing grief, we witness Mare– and all those impacted by Kevin’s death–lose him a thousand times in a thousand ways. As a mother, a source of her agony is the realization that she cannot protect her children. And in perhaps one of the most powerful scenes before the final closing, Mare consoles a widow who doesn’t know how to deal with the death of his wife: “After a while, you learn to live with the unacceptable.”
The supporting ensemble cast– which includes Guy Pearce (Memento, LA Confidential), Julianne Nicholson (August: Osage County), Evan Peters (American Horror Story), and Jean Smart (Hope Springs, The Accountant) — is exceptional. All integrate their characters’ backstories, whether revealed on screen or on their faces, as past histories remaining untold. Winslet, Nicholson, and Smart deliver shattering, emotionally brittle performances, often leaving them trembling from their open wounds. In unforgettable scenes pairing Winslet with Nicholson and Winslet with Smart, we see female empowerment and vulnerability simultaneously and inseparably. Simply brilliant acting!
Availability: HBOMax for streaming
Rita Dragonette
I loved this series. I wish I’d written it. Superb casting/acting. Even if Guy Ritchie was a red herring.
Rita dragonette
Amended: Guy Pearce, not Ritchie
Eugene Markowitz
Excellent review of a quality streaming series. Plots and subplots that keep the viewer constantly engaged by quality acting.
Lana Bryan
It started out so dark that we almost didn’t watch it, but Kate Winslet and the rest of the cast won out. Remarkable series.
lenore gay
Hey,
well, surely the film has wonderful actors! And the read makes it look and sound terrific, unless you’re very familiar with that level of sadness and anger at losses. Sometimes working with my clients that had continuous problems it could seem like a movie, except it was their lives. Usually the chaos and losses were connected. Recovery was possible, but the work was often slow. Those clients were often with me for 2 or 3 years.