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Review: Loneliness and loveliness in ‘North Sea Texas’

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Fragile and romantic, the well-acted Belgian coming-of-age drama “North Sea Texas” depicts the tentative steps from friendship to love that consume a lonely 14-year-old boy in a small coastal town.

Gay, introverted and neglected by his accordion-playing barfly of a single mom, Pim (Jelle Florizoone) takes comfort in private rituals (drawing, washing himself, dressing up) and a box of collected objects that pertain to his crush: outgoing neighbor boy Gino (Mathias Vergels) who’s a few years older.

When the pair’s closeness becomes physical, Pim is faced with the unfamiliar terrain of genuine longing, jealousy and secretiveness.

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Director Bavo Defurne, in adapting André Sollie’s novel, may prefer stylish mood-setting to heavy dramatics, but his interplay of beautifully lit faces — which include Nina Marie Kortekaas as Gino’s sister Sabrina — make for plenty of compelling emotional tension.

Though not without its mini-heartbreaks and melancholic turns, “North Sea Texas” explores emergent sexuality and first love with a refreshing optimism. What Pim goes through — self-preservation in an unsettled home, the thrill of desire, navigating hurt feelings — is plenty universal.

“North Sea Texas.” No MPAA rating; in Dutch with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes. At Sundance Sunset Cinema, West Hollywood.

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