Echo Park

Why do people always go back? Is going back—to a person, or a place—always synonymous with going backwards? Echo Park isn’t the first film to deal with that awkward stage some adults experience, when friends are starting families and beginning to settle down, but it stands out as a story that really problematizes notions of maturity in romantic and familial relationships. A beautifully shot and perfectly soundtracked tale from acclaimed photographer-turned-filmmaker Amanda Marsalis, Echo Park succeeds as a romantic story that resists grand, clichéd declarations and depictions of love, and also as its own love letter of sorts, to a distinctive part of Los Angeles.
Audiences will be moved, immediately, by the cinematography of the film, but the narrative doesn’t take off as quickly, or as smoothly. Mamie Gummer plays a newly-single Sophie who first stands out as an interloper (or even, a member of the forces of gentrification) in a neighborhood beloved and inhabited by Alex (Anthony Okungbowa). The film follows the two as they embark on what has to be the safest romantic escapade of all—the kind where the guy is selling you his couch, because he’s moving back to London in two weeks, and there’s no way two strangers could fall for each other that quickly, so why not hook up?
And, for the most part, the film follows this line of reasoning in its plot. Writer Catalina Aguilar Mastretta could teach many a screenwriter a thing or two about resisting the urge to insert drama and intensity in a relationship that isn’t, necessarily, asking for it. And the actors follow her lead, their greatest talents perhaps being the restraint with which they perform this dance. Gummer and Okungbowa have a lovely chemistry reflected in the easygoing nature of their characters. As complications arise—and they surely do, because quite a bit can happen in two weeks—both actors are careful to keep those easily overdramatized emotions at bay. The result is a sweet, and sometimes bittersweet tale about two adults at a crossroads, both finding difficulty discerning the differences between moving on, settling and giving up.