BENEDICTION – Review

(center, left-right) Kate Phillips as Hester Gatty and Jack Lowden as famed war poet Siegfried Sassoon in a scene from Terence Davies’ biopic BENEDICTION. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions

A haunting biopic about a haunted man, BENEDICTION is a masterful, visually dynamic film about a complex man famous for his writing about the horror of war. Decorated for bravery and beloved by the soldiers serving with him, Siegfried Sassoon was a WWI British officer who returned from that brutal conflict to vocally oppose the war, and became one of Britain’s acclaimed war poets.

BENEDICTION is a brilliant feast of a film, written and directed by British auteur Terence Davies. Sassoon was among the renowned war poets who came out of WWI, a devastating conflict whose brutality virtually wiped out a generation, toppled monarchies, and prompted the Geneva Convention’s rules on warfare. Sassoon’s pointed yet lyrical war poetry struck a chord with a nation where everyone was impacted by it, either surviving the battlefield or experiencing the loss of family and friends. This excellent and beautiful film takes us inside the life of a complicated, troubled but beloved artist who grappled not only with his war trauma but his homosexuality in an era when it was not only socially frowned on but illegal and dangerous.

This is not the first biopic about a literary figure for Terence Davies, who also directed the the 2016 A QUIET PASSION, about Emily Dickinson, played excellently by Cynthia Nixon. Like that film, BENDICTION is led by a stellar performance, by Scottish actor Jack Lowden in a deeply moving performance as Sassoon.

An officer decorated for his bravery and beloved by his soldiers and fellow officers alike, Siegfried Sassoon (Jack Lowden) was sent to an English hospital to recuperate from “trench fever” but once home, decided to refuse to return to the battlefield, penning an open letter accusing military leaders of prolonging a war they could easily end. His act of defiance and protest could have led to court-martial, but wealthy and well-connected friends, particularly his patron Robbie Ross (Simon Russell Beale), intervened and Sassoon, who was already gaining fame for his writing, was declared to be suffering from “shell shock” and sent instead to a military hospital in Scotland.

In Scotland, Sassoon witnessed the suffering of soldiers wounded or maimed by war, met fellow war poet Wilfred Owen (Matthew Tennyson), and was treated by a sympathetic psychotherapist, Dr. Rivers (Ben Daniels ) who helped Sassoon acknowledge his homosexuality. After the war, Sassoon went on to become a lauded star of aristocratic literary circles and London’s glittering theatrical world. Surrounded by famous figures, Sassoon remained haunted by the war and unsettled by his sexuality, ultimately seeking refuge in marriage and religion without finding peace in either.

BENEDICTION gives us the basics of Sassoon’s dramatic, even glamorous at times, life as it moves back and forth in time, from the young soldier in 1914 to the older angry man (played by Peter Capaldi) in the ’60s. Although the film jumps back and forth in time, the flashbacks to Jack Lowden’s younger Sassoon, which makes up the bulk of the film’s 137 minutes running time, is presented in chronological order, so there is no trouble following the narrative.

But this excellent biography not only captures the arc and details of Sassoon’s life, it does what too few movies about artists do: offers a sampling of his art. What’s more, Terence Davies does this in a visually-striking and emotionally moving way. Throughout the film. we hear a number of Sassoon’s poems read in voice-over, usually backed by perfectly selected music, accompanied by almost surreal visual sequences, where the ordinary period scene in which we see the author, slowly is supplanted by archival black and white images of WWI. The effect is both powerful emotionally and beautiful, as well as a perfect visual representation of how memories of the war continually intrude on the poet’s thoughts.

Jack Lowden as WWI poet and veteran Siegfried Sassoon, in Terence Davies’ BENEDICTION. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions

BENEDICTION opens with the elderly Sassoon (Peter Capaldi), arguing with his grown son George (Richard Goulding) as the father becomes set on the puzzling path of converting to Catholicism. But then it flashes back to the young Siegfried (Jack Lowden) and his brother Hamo (Thom Ashley), who would not return from the war, entering a stately concert hall for a performance of Diaghilev’s ballet set to Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring,” while Sassoon’s poem “Concert – Interpretation” is heard in voice-over. The poem commenting satirically and ironically on the audience’s reaction to the Stravinsky’s ground-breaking piece, then shifts to focus on the preparations for war, as we see the curtain rise, revealing not dancers but black-and-white images of smiling young men preparing to go off to WWI.

Think of how many cultural references of the time period are crammed into that scene. Yet, everything flows smoothly and organically, blending into a visually appealing and evocative scene as natural as a landscape painting. Terence Davies pulls off this magical trick time and again in this film, using poetry, music and imagery to harken back to the war, just as Sassoon’s war memories intrude repeatedly on his thoughts. The cinematography by Nicola Daley is beautiful, stunning and unforgettable.

We get several of Sassoon’s poems in the course of the film. The well-written biopic also contains masterful dialog, often acerbic or lacerating, as well as insightful discussions that reveal character. The aristocratic, handsome Sassoon socialized with or was visited by a litany to famous figures of the era, including Winston Churchill (unseen but talked about), T. E. Lawrence (Edward Bennett) and Robert Graves (Jonathan Broadbent). An affair with writer/performer Ivor Novello (played with chilling charm by Jeremy Irvine), one of the most famous stars of the time, led to heartbreak for the poet. Sassoon’s discomfort living his life in the “shadow world” of gay life left him feeling out of place in the world, and led him to marry Hester Gatty (an appealingly warm Kate Phillips). It was common then for gay men to marry for the sake of appearance, but Sassoon seemed to have expected a deeper life change, which he did not find with either marriage or fatherhood.

Jack Lowden gives a powerful, multilayered performance as this complicated, conflicted man. Lowden portrays the handsome, aristocratic Sassoon as a quietly charming man whose mild, polite public persona makes him seem a conventional figure but whose poetry reveals a deeper layer with its pointed anger and intelligence suffusing biting social commentary. In one scene, Lowden’s harmless-seeming poet is invited to recite one of his pieces for a salon of upper-crust dignitaries. He delivers a bomb of a poem, coolly reciting it as if it is the mildest of doggerel. In the film’s emotionally searing final scene, Lowden’s Sassoon sits on a park bench, his composed handsome face slowly crumbling into devastation, while we hear voice-over reciting a heart-breaking poem by Wilfred Owen and see imagines of a veteran in a wheelchair, an indescribably powerful and haunting sequence.

Lowden’s outstanding performance is supported by a strong cast. Peter Capaldi is excellent as the older, embittered Sassoon, gruffly brushing aside his wife Hester (Gemma Jones) and son George (Richard Goulding), and rebuffing an old friend Stephen Tennant (Anton Lesser). As the younger versions of those characters, Kate Phillips as Hester and Calam Lynch as Tennant, also give us strong work. Geraldine James plays well Sassoon’s beloved mother, a nervous, worried, loving woman, traumatized by the loss of one son and puzzled by her other one. A couple of other standouts are Simon Russell Beale as Sassoon’s loyal defender and friend Robbie Ross, whom Sassoon defends in turn in the film, as someone who also stood by Oscar Wilde “at great risk to himself,” before Wilde was jailed for being gay.

BENEDICTION is an excellent film that both entertains and informs, an outstanding biopic that movingly takes us inside this artist’s life and the time period that shaped him, all wrapped in a creative, visually stunning piece of cinema filled with affecting performances.

BENEDICTION opens Friday, June 3, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema, the Chase Park Plaza Cinema, and other theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

SUNSET SONG – Review

sunset song 9
Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

SUNSET SONG is renowned English director Terence Davies’ adaptation of Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s Scottish novel, a drama set in rural Scotland in the years just before and during World War I. Centered on a bright Scottish young woman named Chris, the film is a powerfully moving drama that is at once visually beautiful, in its depiction of the Scottish rural landscape, and realistic in its unblinking portrait of the harshness of working-class farm life and the devastating impact of war.

Agyness Deyn brilliantly plays the lead character, Chris Guthrie, whom we follow from her days as the brightest student in her rural school to her years as a young woman confronting the devastating horror of war from the home front. Chris is a girl who dreams of poetry and of becoming a teacher, and her kind-hearted mother Jean (Daniela Nardini) dotes on her gifted daughter, ensuring she has the time to attend the local college for which she won a scholarship. However, the whole family defers to Chris’ harshly religious, and selfish father John (Peter Mullan) dominates the family, and is particularly abusive towards Chris’ beloved brother Will (Jack Greenlees).

Kevin Guthrie plays Ewan Tavendale, who eventually falls for Chris, while Ian Pirie plays as Chae Strachan and Douglas Rankine play Long Rob, neighbors and friends who play important roles in their lives. Deyn imparts a dark viewpoint, with touches of dry humor, and poetic sensibility to her role as the strong-willed Chris. The film is told from Chris’ point-of view, and is often narrated by her as we follow her from days as a school girl through the challenges of her hard family life and into young adulthood, where the first world war reaches out disrupt their world.

A film adaption of a beloved Scottish novel, one whose themes include resentment towards the distant English rulers, by a filmmaker who has been called a “most English director” seems fraught with risk. Yet, Davies crafts a striking, moving drama that captures the harshness and beauty of the remote land and the devastation of the war on a generation, and a film that is a sort of feminist raised fist, in the form of an indomitable young woman.

The director’s work has been described as poetic realism, a description that fits this film well. Davies’ previous films include an acclaimed adaption of Edith Wharton’s “House of Mirth” but  the hard life of this Scottish lass is portrayed with a stark, gritty realism that audiences might not expect in a film some might call a historical or costume drama. At the same time, the lead character’s voice of narration lead a naturalistic yet poetic tone, as the young girl reflects on the beauty of the landscape, her love of the natural world, the way the land endures generation to generation. The narration also allows her to voice her darker inner thoughts, her resentment of the limits placed on women, especially bright ones like herself, and her particular circumstances with her harsh, selfish father. There is a sense of foreboding that often permeates the film, creating a tension that something awful is about to happen.

The film’s visual beauty comes from the natural world and the landscape in which it is set. The human landscape is stripped of artificial prettiness, as are the actors’ performances, but the photography captures all the beauty of the land as well as the compelling drama of the characters’ ordinary, working-class farm lives.

A scene that illustrates the film’s remarkable balance between realism and romantic beauty is the one where Chris and Ewan first connect romantically. As they walk along a village street lined with quaint stone shops, Ewan starts to cross the street to her but suddenly is blocked by a flock of beautiful black-faced white sheep, herded by a border collie, who fill the road and create a living stream of shifting life he must struggle through to reach her. The scene is visually lovely but also slightly comic, realistically presented  and symbolic.

The film has a surprising feminist slant to it, and it also touches on political movements of the time and the war that virtually wiped out a whole generation of young men. Characters discuss the then-new idea of socialism and express their resentment of the aristocratic class, particularly their distant English rulers. Before the war intrudes, the characters exist in a land that seems remote from the rest of the world, and they sport a pride in their Scottish history. At school, Chris is acknowledged as their best student and wins a scholarship to a nearby college. But her options are limited by being female and by her family’s working class status. The family rents the land they farm, and money is tight, but Chris’ life is particularly shaped by her father’s whims and ego.

There are both emotional highs and lows in this gripping story. For the first part of the film, the emotional tone is often tense, as if something awful were looming, but then shifts dramatically to one of hope. Scenes of poverty, hard-work and the events of daily life in this rural landscape are played for realism, although anything graphically violent is avoided. When the father savagely beats his son, we see the son’s face, not his back but we also see the father turn the belt so the buckle strikes the boy’s back.. When a woman struggles in childbirth, we hear realistic screams, not something genteel and sanitized. As one character puts it, “we’re not gentry.”

This moving drama’s focus and point of view is almost entirely that of young Chris. The film is both personal and epic, following one woman’s life through a time of change, as a timeless rural Scottish life, where Scottish history and traditions are revered, are changed by the slow seeping in of ideas from the larger world and finally a war that nearly wiped out a whole generation of young men, and which swept away monarchies and centuries-old social institutions, to create the modern world. The film is also both starkly realistic and deeply romantic, with its unblinking depiction of hardships of life contrasted with the magical feel of young love, and a love for the land they live in. It also touches on issues about a war that has been described as the world’s first modern war, as well as a conflict that devastated a generation. The film deals with those facts indirectly, through the raw heartbreak of Chris’s experiences.

Everything in Chris’ life is handled with remarkable realism, and the acting is impressive throughout. The one scene that does not seem to ring true is when Ewan returns home to Chris briefly, after being inducted in the army and trained but before being sent to France. His course behavior before even seeing combat is hard to reconcile with how the character had been portrayed up to that point. It strikes a false note, and leaves the audience puzzled and unsettled, although the film does recover from the misstep. The film’s final scene, again focused on Chris, is moving and heartbreaking in the extreme.

SUNSET SONG is a moving film of love and loss, brilliantly acted and masterfully directed, set in a pivotal moment in history.

SUNSET SONG opens in St. Louis on June 3rd, 2016

OVERALL RATING: 4 1/2 OUT OF 5 STARS

sunset song sheet

THE DEEP BLUE SEA ( 2011 ) – The Review

No, this is not a remake of the Samuel L. Jackson brain-enhanced killer sharks thriller. THE DEEP BLUE SEA is actually a new screen adaptation of a stage work more than sixty years old by Terence Rattigan as part of a centennial celebration of the noted British playwright. It’s set just a few years after the end of World War II and could very well have been made in the waning years of Hollywood’s Golden Age . This might be considered a ” woman’s picture ” back in the day and starred Bette Davis or Joan Crawford ( maybe at that time it would be Deborah Kerr or Olivia DeHaviland ). Going back to the early talkies romantic dramas were big earners for the studios in the days before male-dominated action flicks took over . An intimate study focusing on the female protagonist is rare these days. Of course certain elements of this story couldn’t have been tackled in those Production Code days. So can the themes of this decades old play still resonate ?

Well as the song in CASABLANCA says, ” It’s still the same old story. A fight for love and glory…”. Although, in the first scene , all  the fighting of WWII is over. In 1947 Hester ( Rachel Weisz ) shares a modest flat with her younger lover, ex-RAF pilot Freddie ( Tom Hiddleston ). As the film opens, the affair’s downward spiral compels Eve to take desperate measures. Flashbacks reveal that Eve is separated from her much older husband Sir William ( Simon Russell Seale ), a prominent judge. In another sequence we see Freddie’s random meeting  with Hester and their whirlwind, passionate fling. During a weekend with her husband’s cruel, controlling mother the affair is revealed. Sir William will let her go, but he will not grant her a divorce. Hester leaves her lavish lifestyle to move in with the directionless Freddie. It turns out that he does not love her with the same the same fiery passion that she has for him. Loneliness envelops her during the long days when Freddie travels and searches for employment. After her desperate act, Sir William returns. Eve must quickly make a decision about these men and her future.

The film is lifted up by a terrific cast, although the drama really rests on the very talented ( and lovely ) shoulders of Ms.Weisz. After making a name for herself in the first two Mummy flicks, it’s great to see her flexing her acting muscles in more demanding dramatic work. Weisz gives us a portrait of a woman floundering in a stale marriage. When she meets Freddie, her joy almost bursts out of the screen. This makes her crash back to Earth even more shattering. Hiddleston, perhaps best known as the evil Loki in THOR, makes a dashing young lover who relishes those glory days fighting the good fight. He finds life out of the clouds dull and dreary. It’s startling to see this happy-go-lucky chap turn into a man frustrated by a postwar world and by a woman who wants more from him than he can give. On the other hand Beale’s Sir William should be the cold villain of the piece, but he elicits great sympathy as man still desiring a woman who has no desire for him. No mere cuckhold, Sir William is a caring, but still proud man. Kudos to Barbara Jefford as his mother. Her verbal sparing with Weisz in the early scenes really crackle with energy. Ann Mitchell is also very strong as Hester’s stern, but nurturing landlady. The costumes and art direction are superb along with the cinematography. We get a glimpse of pub life in a couple of spirited sing-a-longs along with a look at wartime London. There’s an impressive shot of Hester and Sir William waiting out a bombing raid along with several other Brits in a subway tunnel. Unfortunately the rest of the film shows its stage roots with long, staid dialogue scenes with little editing. Because of this the last act moves almost at a snail’s pace. Fortunately the ensemble does their best to blow the cobwebs off this play and shows us that sometimes the lovers don’t always live happily ever after or  ” as time goes by…”.

Overall Rating: 3.5 Out of 5 Stars