Director Chloé Zhao’s triple Oscar®-winner Nomadland is an empathetic and lyrical film about people living on the road in the American West.
Nomadland ■
Synopsis
Director Chloé Zhao’s triple Oscar®-winner Nomadland is an empathetic and lyrical film about people living on the road in the American West.
Reeling from the early death of her beloved husband and the loss of their home in Empire, Nevada, Fern (Frances McDormand) lives in a kitted-out van, travelling from town to town and picking up short-term seasonal work where she can get it.
It’s a premise built on the experiences of America’s modern day nomads, documented in the source for the film, Jessica Bruder’s book: Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century. But there is also much of Chloé Zhao’s process present in the adaptation. As with her previous works, the film is populated with intimate and compassionate studies of real people playing versions of themselves, such as Fern’s compatriots on the road, Linda, Swankie and Bob, as well as a precious community that has grown out of the ruins of the country’s brutal service economy.
Credits
Rating: 12A
Genre: Drama
Director: Chloé Zhao
Stars: Frances McDormand, David Strathairn, Linda May