Archive for December, 2009

Film & DVD Review: Psycho (1960)

Certification:Finland:K-16 (uncut) (1969) / Finland:K-16 (cut) (1960) / Finland:K-16 (cut) (1965) / Chile:14 (re-rating) / Chile:18 (original rating) / Iceland:16 / Germany:12 (re-rating) (2006) / West Germany:16 (original rating) / Netherlands:12 / Brazil:14 / South Korea:15 / Portugal:M/12 / Argentina:13 (re-rating) / Argentina:16 (original rating) / Australia:M / Canada:13+ (Quebec) / Canada:18 (Nova Scotia) / Canada:PG (Manitoba/Ontario) / France:-12 (re-release) / France:-16 / Israel:16 / Norway:15 / Norway:16 (1960) / Peru:14 / Spain:13 / Sweden:15 / Switzerland:16 (re-release) / UK:15 (video rating) (1986) / UK:X (original rating) / USA:Approved (original rating) / USA:M (re-rating) (1968) / USA:R (re-rating) (1984)

Running time: 192 minutes

Reviewed by David Kerr

Psycho DVD Cover

Click on image to buy DVD

Psycho. is credited as the movie that made horror respectable again. In the fifties horror and fantasy films were the stuff of ‘B’movies; second features to the main film on the bill. They were not taken seriously. Psycho. changed that!

Psycho . was director, Arthur Hitchcock’s first horror picture. He was always the master of mystery and misdirection. Hitchcock always left cinema-goers guessing as to what was going to happen next. In Psycho., he completely misled the audience for the first half hour.

We think we are watching a straightforward crime story. Embezzler Janet Leigh runs off with $40,000 of company cash that she was supposed to lodge in the bank. Heading off to join her lover in California, she stops for the night in a quiet slightly rundown motel. This wasn’t her wisest move, especially when she decided to take a shower…

Hitchcock really piles on the suspense in Psycho. He had it shot in black and white deliberately so as not to fall foul of the censors. Bernard Herrman’s score is pefectly crafted to heighten the exhilaration of the chase as Leigh runs off with the cash and the suspense and menace that awaits her in the Bates Motel.

Anthony Perkins excels as the quiet, shy mummy’s boy motel keeper with a dark secret. Norman Bates and his mother have a special surprise for any guest unfortunate enough to stop for the night in their somewhat off-the-beaten-track motel.

Avoid the ill-advised sequels and the recent remake. Hitchcock’s original, now available in DVD, is the only one worth bothering about.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: The Seventh Seal (1957)

Australia:PG / Italy:T (re-rated) / South Korea:15 / Italy:VM14 (original rating) / Argentina:Atp / Finland:K-16 / Sweden:15 / UK:PG / West Germany:16 / Spain:13 / UK:X (original rating) / Iceland:12 / Singapore:PG

Running time: 192 minutes

Reviewed by David Kerr

Seventh Seal

Click on image to buy this DVD

In tribute to the acclaimed Swedish film director Ingmar Bergman, who died recently, Tartan Films has reissued his most celebrated film on DVD. This fiftieth anniversary Collector’s Edition has also been issued in the new Blu-ray high definition format for those with deeper pockets.

Besides the film, the DVD is packaged with an English language audio track, new subtitles, an original trailer and some behind-the-scenes footage from the film’s set. Film historian Ian Christie has recorded a commentary over the silent footage shedding some light on Bergman’s methods and technique. Fascinating stuff! There’s also a bonus short film, Karin’s Face based on his mother.

So what about the film itself, then? I have to confess never to having seen it until receiving this DVD.

Set during the Black Death, in 14th Century Sweden, a knight back from the crusades (Max von Sydow) comes face-to-face with a hooded man who identifies himself as Death (Bengt Ekerot). He had escaped death several times on his travels and discovers that Death has been stalking him. This is by no means a laugh a minute but there is some surprising humour in it, especially in the role of a travelling band of actors and their relationships with the residents of a village they are passing through – especially one very attractive young woman, the blacksmith’s wife.

This is a very thoughtful film, looking at issues of life and death in an atmosphere of plague and suffering. Was the plague a visitation of God on a sinful people as put about by a hellfire and brimstone friar surrounded by flagellating pilgrims? How do people deal with their fate? Do they accept it? Do they turn on others? Is their faith deepened or lost? The same sort of varying reaction is seen today in the face of terrorism or today’s modern equivalent of hellfire and damnation: ‘global warming’and ‘climate change’. This is deep stuff, but not as depressing as it sounds. It certainly deserves a second or third viewing although I confess to having watched the English dubbed version rather than the subtitled Swedish original.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: Gabbeh

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

Gabbeh DVD cover

Click on image to buy this DVD

A Gabbeh is a type of Persian carpet. The pattern of the carpets are drawn from the experiences of the nomadic Gashgai tribe in southeast Iran who weave them. As Mohsen Makhmalbaf explains:–

Should they go across a desert, yellow will appear; should somebody be born a baby will appear and as for a love story, bright merry colours will be used.

The film uses the device of an image of a young girl who appears from the pattern of such a carpet. She tells her love story to the old woman washing the carpet. By her side her husband listens, and sometimes interjects.

Parallel to Gabbeh’s story is that of her uncle Sahayi who has returned to the countryside from the city where he worked as a schoolmaster. Back home he teaches the children of the tribe how to obtain from the flowers the wonderful colours which will help dye the wool of the gabbeh. This produces some of the most beautiful imagery in the film. When Sahayi points to the poppies in the field and draws back his hand it is a vivid red. When he points to the Sky, blue. The underlying ethos of the film is one of a people living in harmony with nature and drawing inspiration from it.

Reading the description of the film and noting the fact that it was in Persian I must confess I was a little daunted. But Gabbeh is not “arty” or boring, it is an unusual and thought-provoking film. Mohsen Makhmalbaf has tried to explain why Iranian films should draw audiences here in the West:–

These audiences are flooded with violent, tough films and are confronted with the same violence throughout their highly mechanical daily lives. That’s why the simplicity and the quietness one finds about these closely linked-with-nature Iranian films attract such audiences.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: Some Mother’s Son

Reviewed by David Kerr

This film is a very powerful and emotional portrayal of the hunger-strike crisis of 1981 as seen through the eyes of two mothers whose sons take part in the death fast. The film makes no attempt at balance. According to its world-view the IRA are freedom fighters, and their struggle was fully justified. While the IRA are universally heroic and noble the British are manoevring for position amongst themselves and are invariably cunning, evil, debased and conniving. The Loyalist and Protestant community might as well not exist. The only intimation that they are there is during the Fermanagh and South Tyrone bye-election campaign when someone in a speeding car throws a jar of piss in the face of Helen Mirren’s character! At the election count a row of police and soldiers separate singing and shouting supporters of Bobby Sands and Harry West, who is described as the “Unionist and Conservative Party of Great Britain” candidate. In fact West was the leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, but this film gives the misleading view that West was the candidate of some GB-based party rather than the oldest indigenous political party in Ulster.

Much is made of the attempt at ‘criminalisation’of IRA volunteers, for which the Thatcher government is blamed. In a brilliantly propagandist opening scene we see the newly elected Margaret Thatcher recite the Prayer of St Francis of Assisi, and the apparent contradiction of British soldiers blowing up border roads and bridges to prevent ordinary folk from moving their cattle from one field to another.

The plain fact is that this policy began in 1976 under Jim Callaghan’s Labour government. At that time the British government was under massive international pressure – orchestrated by the Leinster House regime and senior US politicians – to end internment of Republican and Loyalist terrorists. This was when the Long Kesh internment camp held prisoners from the Official and Provisional IRA in separate compounds. The UVF, Red Hand Commando and UFF prisoners also had their own compounds. As well as the internees, persons who had been convicted of politically motivated crimes were given ‘special category status’. This system worked reasonably well and helped to keep the lid on much of the political violence.

The main cry of of the intenational opponents of internment was that it was a grave violation of ‘human rights’and that a person should only be in prison if he or she had been convicted of a specific offence. ‘If these people have done anything wrong they should be brought to trial for that, not rounded up like cattle’, was the general cry from the bleeding heart liberals and the Provo groupies in Britain, Eire and North America.

Internment had actually been introduced by the old Stormont government in 1971, and the British government was acutely embarrassed by it. Labour phased out the internment gradually, replaced Long Kesh internment camp with HMP Maze and sought to appease the international criticism by fighting the IRA insurrection as if it was some kind of giant crime wave. Any person convicted of offences committed after March 31st 1976 was sent to the H-blocks in the new Maze prison. IRA and loyalist volunteers refused to wear prison uniform as it marked them out as ‘common criminals’. That was the real background to the situation which Margaret Thatcher inherited in 1979, at the beginning of the film.

I thought that the film captured much of the atmosphere of the 1981 hunger strike crisis well. Helen Mirren excels as the liberal middle-class school teacher Kathleen Quigley who is shocked when her IRA son Gerard is captured in arms. Gerard and his comrade, Frankie Higgins, refuse to wear a convict’s uniform and go on the “blanket” protest. As things escalate they take part in the “dirty” protest and join Bobby Sands on his death fast.

As the protest grows, Kathleen draws closer to Annie Higgins, a bitter republican who is the mother of Frankie, the notorious Provo gunman. Annie provides a bit of comic relief when she refuses to sit under a portrait of Queen Elizabeth when she and Kathleen go into a pub for a brandy.

It is all compelling stuff. The scenes in the prison when Bobby Sands and some of his comrades die is truly moving, as is the treatment of the funeral procession after his death. Unfortunately, the murder of a neighbour of mine by rioting Republicans on the morning of Sands’death as he went about his work as a milk roundsman – and other similar cases – were never mentioned, apart from a scene where a prison officer is shot in front of his family.

It is a well made film, and well worth seeing. With a film biography of Michael Collins due on general release before the end of this year, there is no doubt that “fenianism” is becoming chic.

I have a vision for a screenplay. The story of the 1974 Ulster Workers’Council strike with Glen Barr as the hero who defies two governments, and a life of Fred Crawford the founder of the Young Ulster secret society and the man who ran the guns into Larne for the UVF in 1914.
Perhaps one day…..?

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: Trainspotting

Reviewed by Patrick Harrington

Trainspotting DVD cover

Click on image to buy DVD

I didn’t get to see this when it was on the big screen. Now it’s out on DVD so I got a second chance to take a look. Generally, when the critics say how great a film is it turns out to be a disappointment. Not this time.

Some of my less well informed friends have asked why the film is called Trainspotting. I shall tell them, and you. In Leith there is now a Scotmid store and Waterworld where once there was an unused and decaying railway yard. Heroin addicts would use this yard to shoot-up and the local joke had it that they were “trainspotting”.

When you sit down to watch this film you can’t help but have questions about whether it glorifies drugtaking; there has been so much comment in the papers and magazines about it. The main characters are heroin addicts and some appear cool. But it’s not the drug taking that makes them cool or aspirational. Indeed the film doesn’t shirk from showing the seedy, nasty lifestyle which addiction helps to build. The neglect of a baby is one case in point. Tommy slowly dying of AIDS is another. Of course his poster of Iggy Pop still looked good as he wasted away.
For me, Trainspotting was a very moral film — it just wasn’t preachy.

Why many on the “right” missed this point is a bit of a mystery. Perhaps it was the honesty of the film. It showed that drugs had attractions too. Well, surprise, surprise would people take them otherwise? Or perhaps it was the fact that the soundtrack was so good. Even a bad life set to the likes of Sleeper’s ‘Atomic’, ‘Temptation’and Lou Reed’s ‘Perfect Day’, might seem great. There was some irony in that the use of ‘Perfect Day’was over a scene of an overdose. Having the subtlety and sensibility of a pile of bricks, they might have missed it. The soundtrack fitted the film so well. We just know that heroin addicts at that time and place would have been into this music.

The locations in Edinburgh and Leith were chosen with care. My only disappointment was not to see the addicts hanging around by the statue of Queen Victoria at the foot of the walk. London was less well used as a location but hey, the guy who wrote it doesn’t come from there.

What a contrast to the standardised American crap based almost entirely on special effects we are usually bombarded with! It is interesting to note how the British establishment are unable to deal with people who do understand street culture and have honest, thoughtful insights to share. The writer and film-makers would have been listened to far more in other countries. The debate would have been far more intelligent. Will our establishment ever realise that condemning drugs alone is not a solution? It’s just a way of hiding the fact that you don’t have one….

Comments (1)

Film & DVD Review: Drifting Clouds

Reviewed by Aidan Rankin

Drifting Clouds DVD Cover

Click on image to buy DVD

Drifting Clouds is a beautiful and simple story of ordinary heroism that should be subtitled “how we survived market forces and even laughed”. A married, middle-aged couple, Ilona and Lauri (Kati Outinen and Kari Vaananen) find their lives horribly transformed by sudden unemployment. In the case of Ilona, the restaurant where she works is taken over by a “Chain” which brings its own staff. Only the day before, her husband Lauri had lost his job as a tram-driver because of “reforms” by the company. Their marriage itself is a union of the working class and small business cultures, those two repositories of decent, democratic values threatened with extinction in the name of “progress”.

The setting is Helsinki, but the couple’s predicament is global in its implications. Ilona finds that her life’s work, her ascent from dish-washer to head waiter, counts for nothing in a world of fast food, impersonal service and mind-numbing pop music. Lauri meanwhile fails a medical when he applies for a job as a long-haul bus driver. We watch them chafe against market-imposed idleness and the benefit culture that threatens their self-respect. They drift into cycles of dead-end jobs, dodgy employment agencies, moonlighting, drinking and near-despair. Ironically, their vicissitudes are caused by their attempts to help themselves rather than any failure to seek work. Ilona and Lauri grapple with their loss of status and a sense of belonging as they discover that their skills are not valued. Ilona, for example, finds that she cannot get a loan from her bank to start another small business. Applying for a waitressing job, she is dismissed as “too old” (she is thirty-eight) and that the old-fashioned neighbourhood restaurant where she worked was “no reference”. Salvation comes to her eventually, and in an unexpected twist, but throughout the film there is a knife-edge atmosphere and we fear the worst. We watch in horror as two people whose lives were routine, even dull, are abandoned to the fates and seem about to lose all that they have worked for and achieved.

Drifting Clouds is distinguished by the gentle, understated beauty of its northerly setting. The apartment where Ilona and Lauri live is decorated entirely in primary colours, the streets (clean and car-free by British standards) are lined with golden autumn leaves, the old-fashioned Finnish songs take us back in our imagination to a kinder world where social justice and distinctive cultures are considered important. When the “modern” world intrudes, it does so in crass, disruptive terms. The thugs who attack Lauri listen to mindless British rock music, and at the harbour the names of American and Oriental companies are everywhere in view. Kaurismaki makes excellent use of minor characters, such as the drunken cook, the weak, craven bank manager, the semi-criminal cafe proprietor and the security guard who turns out to be Ilona’s most steadfast friend. Ilona and Lauri also have a small dog, whose long face and saturnine eyes provide an ironic commentary on surrounding events.

Kaurismaki’s characters are men and women who treat each other confidently as equals. They make terrible mistakes at times, but they have an underlying ability to solve problems in a rational way. Ilona and Lauri have strong values, not the false values of sugary Christian piety, but a practical, unsentimental wisdom and a sense of honour. Although the film ends on a positive note, it is imbued with nostalgic melancholy and a sense of something lost. Significantly, there is no next generation. The only child of Ilona and Lauri died in infancy. This tragic circumstance is never mentioned by the couple, but it holds them together and, we suspect, enables them to put the problems of unemployment in perspective.

Drifting Clouds implies that, if present trends persist, the co-operative values and local cultures of Europe will also die. It should be prescribed as compulsory therapy for those who talk so glibly of “market solutions”.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: Evita

Directed by Alan Parker and starring Madonna

Reviewed by Cliff Morrison

Evita DVD cover

Click on image to buy DVD

Eva Duarte first appears as a small-town poor, illegitimate and determined child snubbed at her wealthy father’s funeral. Years later, a “star” singer from Buenos Aires comes to town, and lays the country girl looking for good-times ticket to the the big city. Jimmy Nail plays the part well enough, but his character seems a little too seedy and has-been to be completely convincing.

Dumped in the capital by her reluctant paramour, Eva sleeps her way to the top — the bed of General Peron, one of the military junta who have taken charge of the ailing country.

So far, so good. But this film has no dialogue as such, it relies on newsreel clips and newspaper headlines to bridge the gaps in the musical story. This is where it falls down; not having seen the stage version, I did not realise that the link-man who appears from the background to comment sceptically throughout the film is meant to be the revolutionary wallpaper hero Che Guevara. There is no indication of his identity during the film — he is clean-shaven and in civilian clothes. The frontage of a large building is blown up a couple of times but it isn’t particularly clear that this is the office of a major newspaper — or who has done it, or why.

Juan Peron is played as rather a weak and indecisive figure, too much so to be really credible. Though Eva (by now Evita) is the central character, the wimpish persona of Peron contradicts the fact that he did restore foreign-held Argentinian assets to national ownership; it also diminishes the portrayal of strength and charisma in Eva herself. She must have had plenty of both, to exert such influence in real life.

The film’s music is adequate, not outstanding; the vocals lacked the quality of the earlier (British) versions. Madonna is not a very good actress, she seems a bit wooden and shallow. Her singing is pleasant enough, but ultimately she just lacks the “class” and allure to be Evita.

“Evita” only claims to be a musical, not a historical record. It mangles history to a lesser extent than many of Hollywood’s offerings; in that respect, with Spielberg and Gibson on the loose, it would be unfair to judge this film too harshly.

People all over the world are taking in images and details from the entertainment media, and the realities of history get obscured as a result; the “it was on the TV so it happened like that” syndrome is worrying. It can operate at subconscious level — most effective propaganda does. I’m not saying the distortion is necessarily there for ulterior motives — although it may be, and Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” is the definitive example. “Who controls the past, controls the future” is very true; and one could ask why Menem, the President and leader of Argentina’s Peronist Party, cooperated in the making of a film which detracts from the image of his party’s founder. I do recall that at the time of its first coming to office Menem’s outfit were referred to as “the Coca-Cola party”….

It is sad that many of Evita’s city scenes with the attractive, classical buildings had to be filmed in eastern Europe, since the ubiquitous property speculators and redevelopers had in the meantime “improved” and modernised Buenos Aires, once regarded as a beautiful city.

I saw the film in London, and some of the audience cried at the end when Evita dies. Would I recommend it? Well, it isn’t boring, and for a musical it is thankfully free of the usual song and dance extravaganza cliches. So, reservedly, yes.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: Michael Collins

Directed by Neil Jordan; starring Liam Neeson, Aidan Quinn, Stephen Rea,
Alan Rickman and Julia Roberts.

Reviewed by Jeannie Trueman

Michael Collins DVD cover

Click on image to buy DVD

Historical films are usually depictions of events lost in the dim and distant mists of time. The story of Michael Collins is, however, linked to current controversy – he being one of the leaders of the IRA earlier this century.

The film starts with the Easter uprising of 1916. The IRA fight a doomed battle against the British Army, resulting in the gaoling of those taking part. Included in this number are Michael Collins (Liam Neeson), his friend Harry Boland (Aidan Quinn), and the then leader of the IRA, Eamon DeValera (Alan Rickman). When they are released Collins and Boland resume the struggle, taking control of operations as DeValera is still in jail.

Collins and Boland are best friends as well as comrades; they share the joys and sorrows of their often risky life — and even share the affections of Kitty Kiernan (Julia Roberts), a woman later to become Collins’fiancee. Boland, however, is not angry that he has been passed over in favour of his friend. Personally, I think the inclusion of the Kitty character in the film is an annoying distraction. It is almost as if directors of films do not think that people will find the film interesting unless there is a ‘love interest’! Lovers can be introspective; Comrades, however, look outwards towards the accomplishment of their Cause. This potential conflict is not really explored.

It is interesting to note that the IRA had an advantage — they possessed guns and had no qualms about using them for the defence of their cause. This leads one to ponder on what the motive to the present Government’s plan to ban guns actually is. Is it genuinely to protect us from the actions of dangerous misfits — or do they fear that a discontented populace may someday take up arms against the State?

The weapons were confiscated after a fierce battle. But the IRA were not to be outdone; the guns may have been taken away, but peat is plentiful in Ireland. Burning peat was thrown into the British Headquarters, and the British escaped, leaving their guns behind! Thus the IRA were re-armed. The battle scenes, taking place against the backdrop of Dublin, make this an exciting film.

The British Government eventually backs down, and invites the IRA to negotiate a peace treaty. Collins goes to London, and returns with an agreement that Ireland can become a Free State. They will still have to swear allegiance to the Crown, but their Army can replace the British Army there, which is to stand down.

This is the best they could have hoped for, argues Collins, but DeValera and his followers are bitterly disappointed that Ireland has not been given Republic status. Heated arguments take place in the Dail (the Irish Parliament), whose members are divided into two camps, supporting either Collins or DeValera. Sadly, this is the way that many nationalist struggles turn in on themselves.

Michael Collins and Harry Boland are now on opposite sides. Will the bond of friendship and comradeship, which for years has been so strong, survive?

In my opinion this film is very exciting, because of the action scenes, the comradeship, the idea of people fighting for their community, and making sacrifices for each other.

I would also say that it is a very dangerous film. Dangerous inasmuch as it defends an indefensible organisation; it makes the IRA look like heroes, with the exception of Eamon DeValera. He is made to look like a ‘slimy creep’, as befits a man who as leader of the Irish Government in 1945 was the only Head of State to convey condolences on the death of Hitler. Michael Collins is made to appear handsome, his ‘perfect bone structure’and proud deportment contrasting with the portrayal of the British as tyrants who are willing to fire upon children at a football match. In Cinema, historical fact is often sacrificed for romantic fiction….

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: The Shipping News

Running Time: 111 minutes

Directed by: Lasse Hallstrom

Screenplay by: Robert Nelson Jacobs

Starring: Dame Judi Dench, Kevin Spacey, Julianne Moore, Cate Blanchett, Pete Postlethwaite, Rhys Ifans, Scott Glenn

The Shipping News

Click on image to buy DVD

The Shipping News is based on Annie Prouix’s Pullitzer prize-winning novel. It tells the story of a broken man, a lonely man who has been undermined since childhood. Quoyle (played by Kevin Spacey) is in a dead-end job as a typesetter for the Poughkeepsie News in New York when he meets and marries Petal. Marriage and even his role of Father fail to change or lift Quoyle. It is only after both his wife and Father die and he is persuaded by his long lost aunt (played by Dame Judi Dench) to move back to his ancestral home in Newfoundland in Canada that a process of change within Quoyle begins.

It’s by no means all plain sailing! Quoyle finds out many secrets about his past and the small community he now lives amongst as he settles into the community.

The scenery was imposing and its severity and wild beauty reflected the inner conflicts of the central characters. The cinematography alone made the movie very watchable. The locale was probably the most powerful “character” in the film.

Though the backdrop of Newfoundland is bleak (though beautiful) the story itself becomes less so after the move. We see Quoyle begin to gain strength and confidence when supported by friends, family and neighbours. Where before he was frightened to tell his daughter simply that her mother was dead he now feels able to do so. He begins to come to terms with the “unfinished business” of his childhood. The message of the film is positive — a broken man can be healed.

Leave a Comment

Film & DVD Review: The Importance of Being Earnest

Director: Oliver Parker. Starring: Rupert Everett,Colin Firth, Frances O’Connor, Reese Witherspoon and Judi Dench

Reviewed by Patrick Harrington

The Importance of Being Earnest DVD Cover

Click on image to buy DVD

The Importance of Being Earnest is one of the wittiest plays in the English language. The play contains one hysterical and cynically astute line after another. My favourite is about Happy Endings being what fiction is all about! For anyone who has not seen or read the play, this movie version will be an excellent introduction to it.

The cast is superb, and could hardly have been improved upon among today’s actors and actresses. Colin Firth is a natural to play Jack Worthing AKA Ernest, and Rupert Everett is utterly perfect as Algernon. Frances O’Connor plays Gwendolyn, and Reese Witherspoon does a superb job portraying a young Englishwoman. Judi Dench hands in a strong performance as Lady Bracknell.

Despite this the movie fails to be the definitive film version of Wilde’s play. There are two reasons for this. The first is the presence of an earlier, stronger film. The second is a series of bad decisions made in the production of this film.

Anthony Asquith directed the 1952 film. As good as the current cast is, the earlier cast was, with only one exception, much stronger. Michael Redgrave was a better Jack Worthing than Colin Firth. And while I rate Frances O’Connor highly, Joan Greenwood was probably the best Gwendolyn imaginable. Rupert Everett excels the performance of Michael Dennison as Algernon, and Reese Witherspoon comes close to equaling Dorothy Tutin as Cecily, but not even Judi Dench doesn’t come close to Dame Edith Evans extraordinary performance as Lady Bracknell. This is important to me, as Lady Bracknell is one of my favourite characters -summing-up as she does the attitudes of a certain class of English Lady!

The new film also makes a number of additions and changes to the Wilde play, most of which are unnecessary and distracting. For instance, much of the first scene of the play is relocated in a number of locations, including a brothel, instead of Algernon’s lodgings. Instead of arriving at Jack Worthing’s country estate by rail, Algernon arrives by hot air balloon (!) and Gwendolyn arrives by motorcar. There are a number of scenes in which Cecily imagines knights and nymphs that are quite irritating. And Gwendolyn has “Earnest” tattooed on her bum, a rather absurd modern addition.

The one way in which the newer film surpasses the earlier film is in making the whole thing feel more like a film rather than a filmed play. The Redgrave-Greenwood version was virtually a straight filming of the play, with a bare minimum of deviation or departure. The new film makes considerable efforts to be more dynamic visually and to break up the scenes so that it isn’t obviously divided into Acts.

My advice it to rent or buy both versions and compare and contrast!

Leave a Comment

Older Posts »
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.