Andrew Haigh’s other work shows the director’s interest in relationships and intimacy (although not in an otherworldly way). “Weekend” was about a one-night stand’s transformation into something more substantial, occurring, as the title suggests, in a compressed timeframe. “45 Years”, on the other hand, showed the devastating crack-up of a relationship. Both films showed Haigh’s sensitivity to human behavior, as well as the good care he takes of his actors, the room he gives them to feel and create. Charlotte Rampling was nominated for an Academy Award for “45 Years” and no wonder. Haigh loves actors. “All of Us Strangers” is a quartet, featuring four memorable performances by Andrew Scott, Paul Mescal, Claire Foy, and Jamie Bell.
Scott plays Adam, first seen basking in that eerie molten glow, as though being pulled towards it. He’s a screenwriter, supposed to be working on a new script, but instead puttering about and procrastinating. One night the only other resident of the building knocks on his door. This is drunk, flirtatious, charming Harry (Mescal), looking for a hookup. Nothing happens that night but a delicate thread is established.
On occasion, Adam gets on a bus and travels to the house where he grew up in a nearby suburb. Inside live his parents (Foy, Bell), who died in a car crash when Adam was 12. They are the age when they died. Adam shows up at the door, and his parents are eager to hear about what he’s been doing with himself all this time. It’s a reunion, but the intensity of feeling is too much. This sense of “too much” floods the film: every interaction spills over into the next, and the next, with scenes between Adam and Harry, Adam and his mum, Adam and his dad, alternating. There’s no filler, no downtime. It’s one heavy catharsis after the next.
Haigh’s touch is light, though. He has removed the extraneous and distracting. Loosely based on the 1987 novel Strangers, by Japanese novelist Taichi Yamada (who died just last month at the age of 89), “All of Us Strangers” is about a man coming out of hiding, facing his past and his present, simultaneously. Losing both your parents in a car crash at the age of 12 is, of course, a life-altering event. He has gone through his whole life without witnesses. The reunion is not without its hiccups. When he tells his mother he’s gay, she is shocked. It’s like she’s never even heard of such a thing. She worries it will be a “sad” life for him, a lonely one. Her views are outdated. (The flipside, though, is her fears are not unfounded. Adam is sad, Adam is lonely.) When he breaks the news to his dad, the interaction goes a bit differently. (Jamie Bell, always an interesting actor, is just heartbreaking here.)