Film Review
Director Joe Wright followed up his acclaimed
Pride and Prejudice (2005) with a
second inspired literary adaptation, that of Ian McEwan's bestselling
2001 novel
Atonement. A
heartwrenching tale of guilt, loss and redemption, McEwan's story is
beautifully visualised by Wright, in a way that vividly evokes the era
in which it is set. James McAvoy and Keira Knightley are at their
best as the ill-fated lovers who are separated by the unintentionally
cruel machinations of a teenager, portrayed with arresting charm by
13 year old Saoirse Ronan. This elegantly crafted, deeply moving
film was both a critical and commercial success, and was nominated for
seven Oscars in 2008, although it only took the
award in the Best Score category (Ronan was nominated for the Best
Supporting Actress).
The film retains the ingenious narrative structure of the original
novel, and adopts a fairly conventional approach that is punctuated by
some moments of high artistry. The most visually striking
sequence comes at the film's mid-point, an ambitiously long tracking
shot depicting the Dunkirk evacuation. This sequence makes a
stunning contrast with what precedes it, a minimalist drama set in the
narrow confines of a country house. The film suddenly opens up and
shows that the characters we have met so far are mere specks of dust in
a much bigger human drama being played out on the world stage.
After this sudden outwards zoom, we are taken back in again, and
somehow the drama has even greater immediacy - the sense of loss and
remorse that are slowly accumulating becomes that much more acute.
It has an even greater impact than Henri Verneuil's harrowing depiction of the
Dunkirk evacuation in his 1964 film
Week-end à Zuydcoote.
It is a shame that not all of the film's artistry hits the mark, and
some of it feels downright self-indulgent. A case in point is the
sequence near the end of the film depicting the flooding of Balham tube
station. Although it is convincingly rendered and has a certain
poetry about it, this sequence takes away far more than it adds, an
unnecessary spectacle of cinematic bravado when what is really needed is a
quieter moment of reflection. Too many filmmakers nowadays
feel it is necessary to show us absolutely
everything, whereas understatement,
allowing the specator's imagination to do some of the work, can be more
effective. Apart from one or two lapses into self-consciousness
artiness, Wright's mise-en-scène is generally hard to fault and
more than does justice to McEwan's utterly compulsive novel.
Excelling on so many fronts (the scripting, acting and photography are
all of the highest calibre),
Atonement
could hardly fail to be one of the most impressive British film dramas
in recent years.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
England, in the summer of 1935. Briony Tallis is a 13-year-old girl with an
overactive imagination who lives in a large country house with her
older sister Cecilia. Briony has a crush on the housekeeper's son
Robbie Turner and is shocked when she sees him and Cecilia making love
in the library. When, that same evening, Briony witnesses her
cousin Lola being raped by a man, she incriminates Robbie and he is
arrested. Four years later, Robbie is in France, a serving
solider in the British army. He still corresponds with Cecilia
and looks forward to the day when he will finally be reunited with
her. Meanwhile, Cecilia and Briony have enlisted as nurses to
treat the war-wounded at a hospital in London. Briony, now
18, has come to realise the implications of her childhood deception and
is desperate to redeem herself. But Cecilia has no wish to see
her again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.