Supernova, review: Firth and Tucci’s dementia drama will have you in pieces

Intensely moving: Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci in Supernova
Intensely moving: Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci in Supernova
  • Dir: Harry Macqueen. Starring: Colin Firth, Stanley Tucci, Pippa Haywood, Peter Macqueen, James Dreyfus. 15 cert, 93 mins

Science tells us that the elements found inside the human body have been thrown across the universe to Earth by dying stars. But when the hour arrives for one of us to burn or flicker out, what, if anything, do we give the universe back? That question lies at the heart of Supernova, the immensely tender, sad and uplifting second feature from the British director Harry Macqueen.

It follows a middle-aged gay couple on a driving holiday in the Lake District, shortly after the course of their lives has made a turn for the worse. Tusker (Stanley Tucci), a dapper and deeply personable author, has been diagnosed with young-onset dementia. And this means that Sam (Colin Firth), his partner, and a moderately well-known, taciturn pianist, is steeling himself for the years if not decades of caring ahead, all while the man he fell in love with fades from sight.

For now, they’re coping, just about. Tusker occasionally finds himself unable to alight on the right word – but then the two have been together long enough to be sunk in that strange kind of romantic forgetfulness, where one can refer to virtually any object under the sun as “the thing”, and the other know exactly what they’re talking about. Even so, when a term as simple as “triangle” eludes Tusker, he grows vexed, and tries to suppress his frustration by pawing at his chin – both Tucci and Firth’s performances are alive with such subtle, lived-in gestures; they don’t just make for a personable couple, but also an extremely plausible one.

The pair are travelling in their trusty old camper van, but have two stops planned along the way. One is at Sam’s old family home, where his sister Lilly (Pippa Haywood) lives with her husband Clive (Peter MacQueen) and their daughter. The other is at a remote cottage – a couple of nights away for just the two of them, plus their (adorable) dog, dovetailed with a recital Sam is giving in a town nearby. It’s a journey on which both men must bid farewell to old possibilities, and which they cannot complete without accepting what lies ahead.

Their story is a simple one, and its mechanisms familiar. As a plot device, dementia is as extraordinarily versatile as it is durable: it gave The Father, for which Anthony Hopkins won an Oscar in April, the texture of an unravelling psychological thriller, while last year’s Relic used it as the basis for a story of supernatural possession and dislocation. But what distinguishes Supernova isn’t the particular course of Sam and Tusker’s relationship so much as the relationship itself, which feels utterly honest and real, and also wonderfully familiar, even after we’ve enjoyed just half an hour of their company on screen. It isn’t long after that that Tusker attempts to give a speech at a family dinner party – but after struggling to make sense of his own words, he hands the pages to Sam, who reads them aloud on his behalf.

Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth's characters tour the Lake District in Supernova
Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth's characters tour the Lake District in Supernova

The result is intensely moving, and a kind of romantic ventriloquism, with one partner giving voice to the other’s thoughts, and talking about himself in the third person and the man he loves in the first. This is the kind of clever, understated manoeuvre in which Macqueen’s script specialises: without so much as a snip of sentimentality, it cuts you to emotional shreds.

No point is pressed too emphatically here. The cinematography by Dick Pope is orderly and crisp, with some beautifully lit and psychologically searching close-ups, while the only real stylistic flourishes are the slow, elegant fades between scenes. Much visual pleasure is afforded by corduroy and knitwear. As Sam and Tusker’s journey winds on, its emotional intensity rises in tandem – yet the film’s ending is so understated, it almost isn’t an ending at all.

Yet that, surely, is part of the point of Supernova, and indeed supernovae in general: endings are often just beginnings observed from another perspective. Again, this isn’t an especially original observation. Supernova isn’t saying anything you haven’t heard before in the cinema or elsewhere, perhaps a number of times. But the film’s power lies not in its novelty, but in its delivery and identifiability. Each telling moment, whether big or small, connects unerringly. Its stardust finds us, and every particle feels like one of our own.

In cinemas from Friday