Director: Joe
Wright | Starring:
James McAvoy, Keira Knightley, Brenda Blethyn
Released: 2007
| Runtime: 123m
| Rating (out of 5):
**½ |
Buy on Amazon
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I read this book a bunch
of years ago, and seem to recall a real Wuthering Heights
thing going on. Of course I'm like the nine-millionth person to make
that comparison (proving how completely unoriginal my thinking is),
but what's true is true. Of course Ian McEwan is a really good writer,
and I think a certain literary aspect of his writing certainly came
through in the film. It didn't, however, have that weird British standoffishness
of a Merchant Ivory film, but perhaps it's because the characters
weren't in bodices and feathered hats, but rather the clothing of
the late thirties. Oh, and at one point we can see a character's pubic
patch through her wet dress. I don't remember that happening in A
Room with a View.
This is a slightly more modern tale, as Britain teeters on the edge
of World War II and the impending chaos that is the London bombings
and the battles in France. Winona 2.0, Keira Knightly, plays Cecilia,
a girl of privilege living out in her giant manor house somewhere
in the English countryside. James McAvoy (who I thought stole the
show in The Last King of
Scotland) plays Robbie, the son of Keira Knightley's family's
head housekeeper. The two have grown up together in this house, gone
to school together, but obviously only one of them really belongs
to this society, and the other was merely a boarder. That aside, they
grew up friends, but Cecilia apparently dumped the close friendship
when she went away to college in order to mix with her own kind. Also
in the picture is Cecilia's little sister, Briony. More about her
later. It turns out that Robbie is and has been in love with Cecilia
his entire life, and it seems he is reasonably sure that under all
of her resistance to the fact that she too loves him. It turns out
that there is a bit of a love triangle there--one that nobody is aware
of--but the third wheel in the parallelogram, Briony, the sister.
The action in the beginning of the film revolves around the return
of the family's oldest son to the homestead for the holidays. It turns
out that everyone loves the guy. He really seemed to play a larger
roll in the book, but no matter. He brings home with him the son of
a chocolate magnate. The guy is a scumbag. You can tell by his mustache.
Anyhow, things go a little haywire, the young sister thinks Robbie
is a sex fiend (but does she really?) and ends up accusing him of
something that lands him in jail for a long time.
Flash forward and Robbie has been conscripted into the army. Everyone's
life has changed. The couple who seemed destined to be together have
been torn apart by war, and a lie perpetrated by a jealous child.
The movie goes on showing the lives they lead during the war, always
trying to work their way back to each other. Cecilia has disowned
her family and has volunteered as a nurse, while her man fights the
Germans. Meanwhile the little sister is also trying to make up for
her life-altering decision, also leaving her cushy life to volunteer
as a nurse. Despite her best efforts to repent, she is shut out by
both, who are still bitter and angry over her betrayal.
The movie bogs down for a bit as we experience Robbie’s time
stuck in France, as well as some oddly paced and sequenced scenes
that are either in flashback, or current, or somewhere in between.
Honestly, the thing kind of falls apart a bit as the director tries
to piece together scenes that we eventually learn are mostly fiction
anyway. Oddly enough, though, it somehow works almost better in movie
form than it did in the book. I guess this is a bit of spoiler, so
stop reading now if you care, but the ending is not completely dissimilar
from The
Usual Suspects in that the narrator of the film is also a character
in the film, and is controlling the entire plot. So we have to rely
on her to give us the straight dope on what is actually happening.
If she decides to change facts, we have no choice but to believe her
take on the events. Anyway, the twist in the end is not completely
surprising based on some build up at the beginning of the film (when
you think about it afterwards), but in the book, it actually comes
kind of out of left field. Anyhow, the acting is good, the movie looks
really nice, but it could have been done better with some editing
and perhaps another pass or two on the screenplay to tighten it up
in parts. [DVD, MF]
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