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selenak: (Branagh by Dear_Prudence)
Which is a three-part miniseries written by Russell T. Davies and directed by Stephen Frears, starring Hugh Grant and Ben Wishaw, received with much critical enthusiasm when it was broadcast earlier this year, and currently out on DVD in my part of the world. If you’re a Whovian: RTD also brought Murray Gold with him as a composer (mind you, the soundtrack is quite unlike Gold’s Doctor Who tracks in that it’s jaunty and music-hall like, fitting the dark Ealing comedy tone of the miniseries), and there are some of the usual suspects in minor roles (like Eve Myles as Gwen in part II). Oh, and Alex Jennings who plays the most prominent supporting role, MP Peter Bissell, seems to have become specialized as a certain type of scheming toff, between playing King Leopold in ITV’s Victoria and the Duke of Windsor in The Crown, though Peter Bissell here has a bit more conscience than either.

A Very English Scandal is based on the Jeremy Thorpe affair, which marked the first time the leader of a major British party was on trial for a conspiracy to murder. (RTD can’t resist letting one character comment that given the history of British politics, this is really saying something.) Much like current politics, a lot of the circumstances are so bizarre that they defy satire (though Peter Cooke famously did a sketch based on the judge’s unbelievably biased summing-up to the jury), like the sheer incompetence of the would-be assassin, an off duty pilot. Like I said, overall the narrative tone is one of dark comedy a la Kind Hearts and Coronets, but the miniseries also interweaves the very real tragedies going with the kind of society where a closeted gay politician tries to have his former lover killed; in part I, for example, features an appearance of Lord Arran of „there are not many badgers in the House of Lords“ fame (played by David Bamber), which starts with the comedy (all the badgers in the house) but then gives Bamber the chance to go from funny guy to heartrendering crusader in a few moments when Arran reveals the reason why sponsoring the law to decriminalize homosexuality is so important for him. Also, for all the comedy, there is an underlying anger at the (not that historical) way the old boys network in politics, police forces and parts of the media serves to protect their own to the point where they literally get away with murder.

Both Hugh Grant (as Jeremy Thorpe) and Ben Wishaw (as Norman Scott) deliver great performances. Now I had seen Grant outside his stuttering Englishman rom com persona before (early in his career as Clive in Maurice, and also later playing a heartless cad in An Awfully Big Adventure), so it didn’t surprise me he has some variety, but even so, this is easily the best performance I’ve watched him do. One of the most outstanding moments for me was a silent one on his part, which comes in the third episode, when after an old letter of his to Norman Scott has been published his wife Marian (played by Monica Dolan) points out that while everyone fixates on the nickname „bunnies“ in the letter, what struck her was the „P.S. I miss you“ and adds: „I think that is a wonderful thing to tell a friend“. Now Marian isn’t being naive here (earlier she cut Thorpe’s „so not gay!“ protests off with „I practically grew up with Benjamin Britten“, which is a great geeky „oh, please“ on the part of the script and also happens to be true), and in the scene it hits the audience at the same time it hits Thorpe what she’s signalling him here: that she understands and accepts him, that he doesn’t have to hide himself from here anymore. And in that moment, this character who otherwise is never bereft of a clever answer, whether in politics or in private, is utterly silent, you can see the professional mask slipping and melting as he absolutely has no idea how to handle this.

Ben Wishaw is equally good. The stakes are initially against his character – prone to burst into tears at any moment, throwing tantrums, messing up the one really well paying job he gets (as a model) due to his own faults -, but when, in the first episode, Thorpe tells his confidant Bissell that Norman should be easy to intimidate into silence, Bissell disagrees, pointing out that Norman Scott is able to do what neither of them dares, to live openly as a gay man in the face of all the ridicule and hate, and that he just might be more courageous than them all. By the time the third episode ends, the audience agrees, and he emerges as the hero of the tale. (Mind you, the casting poses one tiny problem; when Thorpe’s lawyer asks him in a rare moment why on earth he started a relationship with someone like Norman Scott to begin with, I was tempted to reply, well, given that he’s played by Ben Wishaw… )

In conclusion: very worth watching. I hear in the US it’s on Amazon Prime; not so in Germany, which is why I got the DVD.
selenak: (Default)
There is always a retrospective for one specific director at the Munich Film Festival, along with the new program. This year, it's for Stephen Frears. Considering that I've seen My Beautiful Laundrette, Dangerous Liasons and even The Queen repeatedly, I went for films of his I hadn't known, which so far meant:

Gumshoe: Frears' first feature film from 1971. Homage/Parody of a film noir with the action set in Liverpool, starring Albert Finney, Frank Finlay, Billie Whitelaw and Carolyn Seymour. (As I had just recently seen the later as a Romulan commander when I rewatched the TNG episode Face of the Enemy, it was a bit eerie to see her as a naive young thing.) It's enjoyable enough, though nothing outstanding; what struck me most was the music because I went from thinking "hang on, this is a clever parody of 1940s Hollywood music" to "wait a minute, I know that theme; that's from Andrew Llyod Webber's musical version of Sunset Boulevard, the title melody, no less. ZOMG, does that mean ALW stole it from this movie?" Then, after the film ended, I saw the credits. One young turk named Andrew Llyod Webber was responsible for the score. (Stealing from yourself is okay.)

High Fidelity: based on a Nick Hornby novel though set in the US, this one proves the role that you can't go wrong if you employ the Cusack siblings in the same movie and give Joan Cusack one scene where she gets to chew John Cusack out in a sisterly fashion. Fun movie, if you're in the mood for one about fanboys and their dating problems, which I luckily was.

The High-Lo Country: Western which was supposed to be Sam Peckinpah's last project and which Stephen Frears took over at Martin Scorsese's request. He got a silver bear at the Berlinale 1999 out of it, and it's very well directed, but unfortunately, enjoying it depends on you finding Woody Harrelson's character, Big Boy, a charming force of nature, whereas I felt he was a smug bully. Seriously, between the constant verbal humiliations and the physical bullying, I was only surprised his brother waited so long, not that what happened did happen, and I all but cheered. (Similarly, my sympathies were with Mona's husband, the much put-upon Les, and when Big Boy started with the boasting about comparing dicks, I had the killing urge myself.) I appreciated Mona wasn't demonized to make the ode to the unbreakable male bond between our narrator Pete (Billy Crudup) and Big Boy stronger, which was tricky to do given the narrative, but Frears pulled it off (not least with some close-ups to Mona's face at crucial moments which gave her more ambiguity than the story did), but as I said - enjoying the film really depends on you liking Big Boy, and I loathed him.

Not from Stephen Frears but an European premiere:

The Bomber, by Paul Cotter. A small road movie about an old Englishman who returns to the German village he had bombed as a pilot during WWII, together with his wife and son. The first feature-length film of this director who was there (together with his proud family), shot with a crew of seven, only three professional actors (and a lot of German extras), and the results are very watchable. The family locked in a car together/ tourists abroad comedy is never cheap, and scenes like the stoic old Alistair finally talking about the night of the bombing, or his wife talking to their son about finally having enough are genuinenly touching.

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