Film Review
Kazuo Ishiguro's critically acclaimed novel
The Remains of the Day (winner of
the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 1989) is faultlessly adapted for
the big screen by the award-winning team of screenwriter Ruth Prawer
Jhabvala and director James Ivory, whose previous literary adaptations
include such cinematic jewels as
Heat and Dust,
A Room With a View and
Howards End. The
recurring central theme of James Ivory's oeuvre - the frustration of
personal desires by social and other constraints - is once again
delicately rendered in this, his most perfectly crafted film to
date.
The Remains of the Day
is a profoundly moving study in repressed love, whose apparent
gentility and calm are belied by the ferocity with which it pierces the
heart in its closing scenes.
The best film to come out of the partnership of producer Ismail
Merchant and director James Ivory,
The Remains of the Day was highly
praised by the critics on its first release and received eight Oscar
nominations, although it failed (remarkably) to win a single award (
Schindler's List prevented it from
getting the Best Picture and Best Director awards, and Tom Hanks robbed
Anthony Hopkins of the Best Actor award). Not only is it a
supremely elegant piece of filmmaking, beautifully photographed by Tony
Pierce-Roberts and evocatively scored by Richard Robbins, it is also
intensely moving. Through some deft writing and flawless acting,
The Remains of the Day is
assuredly one of cinema's most heartbreaking and authentic depictions
of unrequited love, a film that stays with you long after you have seen
it, along with the aching sense of loss that it so powerfully evokes.
Following on from their memorable collaboration on
Howards End, Anthony Hopkins and
Emma Thompson are brought together again for another fraught romantic
encounter, and, more than anything, it is their extraordinary screen
rapport which makes
The Remains of
the Day such a rich and devastatingly affecting piece of
cinema. As the stiff butler who is chronically incapable of
expressing his true feelings, Hopkins turns in the finest performance
of his career (and even possibly the finest performance of any British
film), but it is only in his scenes with Thompson (also at her absolute
best) that the full impact of his work hits home. The presence of
such stars as James Fox, Christopher Reeve and Hugh Grant (each at his
customary best) cannot draw our attention away from the two leads, who
are simply stunning.
The genius of Jhabvala's screenplay lies not in what is said, but
rather in what is left unsaid, the words that Stevens so evidently
wants to utter (and which Miss Kenton so desperately wants to hear) but
which get strangled at birth like troublesome puppies as the butler
goes about his duties. Stevens is a victim of his professionalism and
misplaced loyalty to his employer; he will allow nothing to distract
him from his work as a first rate butler. It is evident that he
desperately needs emotional support from others, but it is equally
apparent that he is incapable of accepting it. In one touching
scene, Stevens is seemingly unaffected when he learns of his father's
death - his work must always come first. It is as if he is afraid
of the power of his own emotions, and so he is compelled to lock them
away, petrified of the havoc they may wreak if ever they were to
escape. Hopkins offers up only the merest hint of Stevens'
private battle to repress his feelings - just enough to expose the
character's inner conflict and force us to share his exquisite
torment. The sequence in which Stevens' unspoken hopes are
finally and irrevocably dashed when Miss Kenton makes her fatal
decision at the end of the film is brutal in its poignancy, all the
more heartrending for the way in which Hopkins and Thompson underplay
the scene - once again, their two characters find it impossible to say
what they really feel.
The
Remains of the Day reaches parts that most romantic dramas fail
to come within miles of touching - an emotional roller coaster of the
gentlest and cruellest kind you can imagine. If you have tears,
prepare to shed them now, by the bucket-load. Then, go and read
Kazuo Ishiguro's marvellous novel, and do it all over again.
© James Travers 2012
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Next James Ivory film:
A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries (1998)
Film Synopsis
Mr James Stevens is the butler at Darlington Hall, one of England's
grander stately homes. Recently the Hall has changed hands and
Stevens now serves Mr Lewis, a retired American congressman.
Stevens' previous employer, Lord Darlington, lived as a recluse before
he died, having lost a lawsuit against a tabloid newspaper that branded
him a Nazi sympathiser during WWII. Stevens is in the process of
hiring more servants for his new employer when he receives a letter
from a former colleague, Miss Kenton, who worked at the Hall as a
housekeeper twenty years previously. In her letter, Miss Kenton
reveals that her marriage has been a disappointment and describes her
time at Darlington Hall as the happiest of her life. On the
pretext of persuading Miss Kenton to resume her former duties at the
Hall, Stevens arranges to meet her at the seaside resort where she now
lives. As he undertakes the long car journey across England, the
butler casts his mind back to the 1930s, when he first met Miss Kenton
and gradually developed a close relationship with her. Anxious
not to let his personal feelings intrude upon his professional duties,
Stevens treated Miss Kenton with a detachment that befitted both their
situations, but this did not prevent them from growing fond of one
another. In the twilight of his years, Stevens finally realises
what Miss Kenton meant to him and how he has wasted his life.
Maybe there is still time for him to show her how much she really means
to him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.