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Strange But True has the strange part figured out, says Chris Knight

Margaret Qualley plays the pregnant Melissa in Strange But True. You'll never guess who the father is.
Margaret Qualley plays the pregnant Melissa in Strange But True. You'll never guess who the father is.

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There are all kinds of twists in the movies, and all kinds of twist-watchers, from the know-it-alls who claim they figured out The Sixth Sense in the opening scene, to those who were gob-smacked part way through Mary Poppins Returns : “Wait. You mean – she comes back ?!”

But good luck guessing the revelations in Strange But True , which is decidedly strange and not at all true. Not because the plot perturbations are particularly clever or devious. Rather, they border on the random. The screenplay by Eric Garcia is supposedly based on a novel by John Searles, but feels as though it came together at the end of a long night of playing Mad Libs.

You can even do it yourself: “After (character 1) accidentally (verbs) (character 2), a fortuitous phone call alerts (character 3) to an (adjective) plan, while an (adjective) flashback reveals how someone died, even though we don’t give a rat’s (body part) by this point.” Fill in the blanks and you’ll be just as informed as I was after seeing this messy movie.

There are so many paths for a story like this to take, and Strange But True tries pretty much all of them

The film opens on twentyish Philip (Nick Robinson) hobbling away from some unspecified danger, injured and in possession of but a single crutch. Then it’s the ol’ “two days earlier” subtitle, where we see Philip, much calmer and fully crutched, receiving an unexpected visit from his dead brother’s ex-girlfriend.

Melissa (Margaret Qualley) is about eight months pregnant, and calmly informs Philip that the dead brother is the father. But that doesn’t add up, since he died several years ago. Melissa claims she’s never had sex with anyone else, and swears by her psychic that she’s been impregnated by a ghost.

There are so many paths for a story like this to take, and Strange But True tries pretty much all of them. Family drama, psychological thriller, murder mystery, teen romance – about the only place it doesn’t go is full-on supernatural horror, and that’s only because, at a trim 96 minutes, it runs out of time.

Philip decides to track down the psychic (Allegra Fulton), while Mom (Amy Ryan) becomes obsessed with the idea that her son had his sperm frozen before or possibly right after he died. Meanwhile, Melissa seeks solace with a kind couple who aren’t related to her but treat her as a daughter; they’re played by Blythe Danner and Brian Cox. Oh, and Greg Kinnear pops up as Ryan’s ex-husband.

It’s a stellar cast, bursting with Oscar nominees and Golden Globe winners, not to mention Robinson’s multiple nominations at the Teen Choice Awards including a win for breakout star in 2018’s Love, Simon . And the sheer amount of talent on the screen may be the only reason the film is as watchable as it is, though I did start to wonder whether any of the actors had been given the entire script, so varied were the tones in their performances.

But consistent pitch is the least of your worries if you wade into Strange But True ’s narrative thickets. And good luck if you’re the type who likes to figure out the ending before the movie reveals it. You’ll be like a batter at the plate, expecting a curveball, when the pitcher delivers – a cold glass of water. Didn’t see that coming, did you?

Strange But True is available July 3 on demand.

1.5 stars out of 5

Copyright Postmedia Network Inc., 2020

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