Daily Archives: Tuesday, March 29, 2016

  • Last Orders

    Fred Schepisi (2001)

    Fred Schepisi’s adaptation of Graham Swift’s Booker Prize-winning novel of 1996 is conscientious, sensitive and respectfully unimaginative.   The main characters are an elderly trio of friends and drinking buddies from South London. Swift’s title refers to, as well the traditional pub call, the instructions left by the recently deceased meat butcher Jack Dodds that his three old pals scatter his ashes at Margate.   Vic (an undertaker), Ray (who bets on the horses) and Lenny (an ex-boxer) are driven to the Kent coast by Jack’s adopted son Vince (a used car salesman).  Vince was taken in by Jack’s wife, Amy, when the child’s parents were killed in a World War II air raid.  Amy doesn’t accompany the men to Margate:  it’s her day for visiting her and Jack’s only biological child, the mentally retarded June, who’s spent the fifty years of her life in care.  (Jack would never have anything to do with his daughter.)  The journey is punctuated by flashbacks to the characters’ pasts and relationships with each other over the decades, and to a more recent conversation, immediately after Jack’s death, between Amy and Ray, who’ve long been fond of each other and who once had a brief affair.  The narrative structure mirrors that of the novel and is integral to the story’s themes – love and friendship, loyalty and betrayal, change and decay – but the whole thing is literal and even-paced; and some flashbacks are perfunctory – mere visualisations of remarks being made by the characters in the present.  It’s as if bringing the material to the screen is an end in itself.

    The actors are good but the film’s lack of momentum has a curious effect:  you can somehow hear the call of ‘Action!’ at the start of each scene and see the actors start to perform.  This is especially the case with the conversations between Amy and Ray beside the Thames even though, once these get underway, the playing of Helen Mirren and Bob Hoskins is particularly good.  When Lenny and Vince come to blows, the physical expression of the tensions between them comes almost as a relief yet the sequence feels too prepared then doesn’t leave any residue.  In the flashbacks, Kelly Reilly has a wonderful bloom as the young Amy (J J Feild is young Jack).  The contrast between her and the increasingly tired and dowdy older woman is affecting – and there’s a fine moment when Helen Mirren’s laugh connects Amy to her younger self.  Mirren has to work hard to be this unglamorous but she does well.  In a cast that also includes Michael Caine (Jack), Tom Courtenay (Vic), David Hemmings (Lenny) and Ray Winstone (Vince), Bob Hoskins is outstanding.  (He also looks right at different ages – most of the actors do, thanks to the skill of the costume designer Jill Taylor and the hairstyling team.)  In the back of Vince’s car, Ray laughs along with the others but he does a lot of thinking too.  Hoskins is especially expressive in stillness and silence, as Ray sits alone in Canterbury Cathedral, which the men visit shortly before they reach their final destination.  The racing details are unusually credible:  Ray, trying to pick a winner for the dying Jack, is surrounded by Timeform and Raceform volumes; the commentary on the race that his selection wins is over the top but Fancy Free is meant to be running in the 3.30 at Doncaster and the race shown on screen really is at Town Moor.   Brian Tufano’s lighting of the long-ago flashbacks gives them a nostalgic sheen and the climactic image of the men throwing ashes into the sea in rainswept Margate is gravely beautiful.

    27 January 2015

  • Lassie Come Home

    Fred M Wilcox (1943)

    It was on television a few days after I saw War Horse and I was keen to compare them.  It’s basically the same plot – boy and animal separated, finally reunited after a physically arduous journey (though in this case arduous for the animal only).  The separation comes about in a similar way too:  the story is set during the Depression and unemployed Sam Carraclough has to sell his son Joe’s collie Lassie to the Duke of somewhere in Yorkshire to pay the rent on the family’s cottage and keep food on their table.  Lassie Come Home is easier to enjoy than War Horse because you don’t feel guilty about resenting the Great War getting in the way of the central love story.  That’s not to say the film isn’t tough to watch at times.  In the slightly comical early stages, the heroine’s repeated escapes from the Duke’s kennels make it look as if Lassie’s going to come home every five minutes but, once she’s been taken by the Duke and his nasty-piece-of-work dog handler to show in Scotland, and decides to make her way back to Yorkshire from there, this ‘picturization’ (as the opening titles call it) of a book by Eric Knight becomes emotionally involving.  En route, Lassie is at the mercy of spectacularly adverse weather and terrain and more than once injured.  In a truly upsetting scene, Toots, another dog she pals up with, is killed by two men who are trying to rob Toots’ owner, a travelling pedlar.  When Lassie eventually gets back home and goes to meet Joe from school on the stroke of four, as she always used to do, she has a bad limp after a fall escaping from a high window.  I was relieved that Fred M Wilcox and Hugo Butler, who did the screenplay, appended a short postscript, in which we see Joe and the Duke’s little granddaughter Priscilla riding bicycles together, followed by not only Lassie in fine fettle but also a litter of her puppies.  (By this point, Sam Carraclough has taken over as the Duke’s right-hand man at the kennels.)

    Needless to say, Lassie Come Home is technically primitive compared with War Horse.   The landscape is more Monument Valley than the Yorkshire moors and the water Lassie swims across to get back into England suggests the Everglades as much as the Tweed.  But I think the action sequences are more exciting than in Spielberg’s film and the people Lassie meets on the way back are more taking.  They include an elderly couple played by the real- life husband and wife Ben Webster and Dame May Whitty, and Edmund Gwenn, who is superb as the tinker, Rowlie.   There’s depth, as well as warmth and humour, in Gwenn’s playing and he engages with the dogs particularly fully and easily.  He also has the most convincing Yorkshire accent, even though, as a travelling man, he needs one less than most.  Donald Crisp’s voice as Sam is all-purpose Celtic – vaguely Scottish at first, then a bit of Irish, eventually more Welsh than anything (as if he’d not quite got How Green Was My Valley out of his system).  But if his accent isn’t authentic everything else this fine actor does is:  Sam often has to struggle to keep his feelings under cover and Crisp does this with a quiet power.  Elsa Lanchester is Sam’s wife and Roddy McDowall as young Joe is appealingly serious.  (There’s one bit when Joe’s crying and you can see not just tears running down his cheeks but a skein of mucus dripping from his face.)  Nigel Bruce is the Duke, J Pat O’Malley the bad dog handler who gets the push, and the eleven-year-old Elizabeth Taylor is Priscilla.   She’s incredibly witty and assured, as well as beautiful, but not in the least a precocious pain.  Even at this age she knew how to wear costumes.

    The Patsy Awards weren’t properly up and running in 1943 but Pal, the three-year-old male dog who plays Lassie, would clearly have won if they had been.   Pal starred in all six subsequent Lassie films of the era and, according to Wikipedia:

    ‘… then appeared briefly in shows, fairs, and rodeos around the United States before starring in the two pilots filmed in 1954 for the television series, Lassie. Pal retired after filming the television pilots, and died in 1958. He sired a line of descendants who continued to play the fictional character he originated. The Saturday Evening Post said Pal had “the most spectacular canine career in film history”.’

    Yorkshire-born Eric Knight, whose Lassie Come-Home was published in 1940, died in action fighting for US forces in January 1943 and the film, released in October that year, is dedicated to him.

    10 March 2012

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