Monthly Archives: September 2017

  • Victoria and Abdul

    Stephen Frears (2017)

    Stephen Frears, working from a screenplay by Lee Hall, dramatises the platonic relationship between the elderly Queen Victoria (Judi Dench) and the Indian Abdul Karim (Ali Fazal), and the hostility both faced within the British royal household as a result.  Dispatched to England for a minor role in the Golden Jubilee celebrations of 1887, Abdul becomes Victoria’s confidant and the object of her maternal affections throughout the remaining years of her life.  The monarch’s actual son, the Prince of Wales (Eddie Izzard), is at the forefront of increasingly vigorous opposition to Abdul’s surprising status and influence on the Queen.  ‘Inspired by true events’, says the screen, at the start of Victoria and Abdul, before adding, after a little pause, ‘mostly’The last word appears in different, cursive lettering.  The archness of that ‘mostly’ foreshadows the isn’t-this-amusing tone of much of what follows.  Isn’t-it-amusing is in effect an assumption on the part of the people who made this film rather than a question.  Even so, it requires an answer, which is no.

    Objections to costume drama with imperialist and racial themes, unless it’s the work of descendants of the victims of colonial oppression, are getting to be automatic nowadays.  That tendency can be vexing and unfair; in the case of Victoria and Abdul it’s more than justified.  Most of the supporting characters are required to double up as (a) representatives of imperial racism and (b) professional creeps, their noses put out of joint by Abdul’s ascendancy.  The combination of the two is, thanks to crude writing and acting, farcical:  (b) overwhelms (a) – the disgruntled courtiers have no more malignant weight than outraged acolytes in a panto.  This tonal misjudgment is all the more glaring in the light of the film’s occasional, clumsy lurches into straight-faced moral censure – as when Mohammed Buksh (Adeel Akhtar), who accompanies Abdul to England and humiliatingly becomes the other Indian’s servant, gives the future Edward VII a piece of his mind.  Or as when, after Victoria’s death, her successor cruelly ejects Abdul and his family and has them shipped back to India.  (The new king is so spitefully vengeful that he personally supervises the chucking out – as if.)   I thought there was a risk this tardy sequel to John Madden’s Mrs Brown (1997) would try to force the charm that emerged naturally in the earlier film but I didn’t expect anything as unfit for purpose as Victoria and Abdul turns out to be.  It’s shocking that a director as good as Stephen Frears has often been could perpetrate it, even if Lee Hall’s script is the fundamental problem.

    When the Queen first asks him questions, Abdul tries to explain that he’s a clerk in an Agra jail but she immediately gets an idée fixe that he’s descended from a long line of learned men.  She has him give her Urdu lessons and educate her in the Koran; she calls him ‘the Munshi’ (Urdu for teacher).  Later on, however, she upbraids him for deceiving her about his social and professional status.  At the height of the Abdul-inspired revolt against the monarch, Miss Phipps (Fenella Woolgar), one of her attendants, summons the courage to tell the Queen, to her face, that she and other courtiers are ready to resign their position.  There’s then a showdown with the whole household:  Victoria challenges anyone wanting to leave to speak up immediately.  No one does and the Queen looks scornfully vindicated – even though Miss Phipps did just speak up.  It’s difficult to tell whether these bits of amnesia are indications that Victoria is becoming gaga or of sloppy storytelling.  A larger puzzle is why Stephen Frears has encouraged or allowed such gruesome overacting in some of the supporting roles.  Eddie Izzard and Olivia Williams (a lady-in-waiting), who merely vilify their characters, are bad enough.  Paul Higgins and Robin Soans, as other members of the royal entourage,are idiotic.  It may sound like welcome progress in a Raj-themed period piece that it’s white minor characters, rather than Indian ones, who pull faces and dash about comically but the spectacle is nonetheless excruciating.  Paul Higgins – as Reid, the Queen’s doctor – has to be singled out for special dispraise.  On television a few months ago, this mysteriously employed actor and Thandie Newton stood out like two sore thumbs in the strong cast of the latest Line of Duty.  The competition for worst performance in Victoria and Abdul is much keener but Higgins is a clear winner.

    The closing legends imply that little was known about the film’s extraordinary central relationship until Abdul’s letters and diary came to light in 2010, a full century after his death (in 1909, at the age of forty-six, on the estate in Agra that Victoria had arranged for him).  The recent discovery of his writings may explain why it’s taken so long to produce a follow-up to Mrs Brown but the implication of a secret history is misleading.  Abdul Karim was a sufficiently well known figure for, for example, Elizabeth Longford to write in her 1964 biography of Victoria that he:

    ‘… stirred once more that same royal imagination which had magnified the virtues of John Brown … Nevertheless, [it] insinuated into her confidence an inferior person, while it increased the nation’s dizzy infatuation with an inferior dream, the dream of Colonial Empire.’

    The film’s name is misleading too – at least for anyone who assumes that a balanced pairing of the title characters is in prospect.  Abdul is a sketchy conception and Lee Hall takes patronising care to ensure that he’s innocuous.  According to the film, Abdul is chosen to be a temporary royal attendant in England because he’s unusually tall.  (The much smaller Mohammed Buksh is a hasty substitute for another man, who meets with an accident just before the party is due to set off from India.)   Abdul, although a quick learner of English language and manners, is primarily a charming innocent abroad, secondarily a victim of racial prejudice and envy.   The script isn’t prepared to explore the tensions between him and Mohammed – whose grumbling is largely comical until he abruptly changes his tune with Bertie – or to give much sense of Abdul being, as well as adoring of Victoria, a canny opportunist.  At the Queen’s insistence, Abdul brings his wife (Sukh Ojla), whose existence he doesn’t at first mention, over to Britain.  Victoria is worried about the couple’s childlessness and has them both tested by Dr Reid.  Mrs Abdul’s examination supplies the worst of several dim burqa jokes.  Reid discovers that her husband is ‘riddled with the clap’; the doctor is ecstatic because this confirms his and others’ view of Abdul as a low-born wretch but it’s hard to believe that the nice young man the film presents could have contracted gonorrhea through extra-marital sex.  Ali Fazal, a big Bollywood name, has an appealing animation in his early scenes and is perfectly competent throughout yet his role seems essentially demeaning.   Fazal’s portrait works only because he shows us Abdul as if through the enchanted eyes of Victoria.

    Which brings us to the only good reason for seeing Victoria and Abdul (and seeing it through).  Judi Dench, approaching her eighty-third birthday, is now older than Queen Victoria lived to be.  To repeat my thoughts watching Philomena (2013), Dench’s previous, much more successful collaboration with Stephen Frears:  you worry more with each film that you may be witnessing her swansong.  That worry is, sad to say, sharpened here by the presence in the cast of Tim Pigott-Smith.  (It’s a consolation that, as Victoria’s private secretary, Sir Henry Ponsonby, he gives one of the few discreet and sympathetic supporting turns, along with Michael Gambon’s cameo of Lord Salisbury, the prime minister of the day.)  Judi Dench’s acting is without vanity and fearless.  She is masterly in transforming Victoria from the sour, fearful, isolated and moribund creature of the early scenes – working her way through the courses of a banquet to get them over with as quickly as possible, before she dozes off and snores – into the alert, amused woman whom Abdul has  reinvigorated.  The script, as well as laughably characterising Victoria as an anti-racist ahead of her time, skimps on what is potentially the most interesting element of the story:  how the Queen shrewdly exploits her authority to indulge a whim of iron.  When the Prince of Wales threatens to have his mother certified, Lee Hall gives Dench a long response in which she enumerates her faults and weaknesses before asserting that ‘I am anything but insane’.  You can see this punchline coming a mile off (even if you’ve not already heard it in the trailer) but the journey is more than worthwhile.  Even she can’t alchemise Victoria and Abdul as a whole yet it features, as do most things involving Judi Dench, great acting.  You emerge from this bad film feeling privileged.

    18 September 2017

  • Borg vs McEnroe

    Janus Metz (2017)

    For those of us who follow tennis throughout the year, British Wimbledon-centrism can be irritating.  The sustained success of Andy Murray – a British standard-bearer to follow wherever he’s playing – has resulted in a positive change in media coverage but there’s a persisting public tendency to see Wimbledon, because it’s the most important tennis tournament, as the only tennis tournament.  Januz Metz’s Borg vs McEnroe, with a screenplay by Ronnie Sandahl, should go down well with this kind of audience.  The classic 1980 Wimbledon final between the two title characters, played by Sverrir Gudnason and Shia LaBeouf respectively, is, as well as the film’s climax, its continuing focus (interspersed with flashbacks to Borg’s and McEnroe’s younger selves).  There’s no suggestion that the world’s two top-ranked players have met in competition before (their first Wimbledon meeting was actually their eighth tournament contest).  Björn Borg’s supremacy is presented as unqualified (although he’d won four consecutive Wimbledons from 1976 to 1979, it was only in the last of those years that he’d overtaken Jimmy Connors as world number one for a decent length of time).  There’s never a mention of the US Open (which McEnroe had won for the first time in 1979 and which Borg never won), let alone the Australian Open (which, to be fair, didn’t, in the 1970s, have the cachet that it now enjoys, although it was always technically one of the four Grand Slam events).  We briefly see Borg on red clay but he’s practising on a court in Monte Carlo, where he lives, rather than playing at Roland Garros (text on screen at one point does record that he won his first French Open in 1974). 

    Borg vs McEnroe makes for much easier viewing than the real thing was.  If it matters to you who wins a best-of-five-sets tennis match, it’s murder to watch, especially because of the time it often takes.  In recent years, it’s become a tradition for me to go for a very long Sunday afternoon walk whenever Roger Federer is in the Wimbledon final.  (That’s a good few walks by now.  The most unforgettably rewarding one came in 2007, when Federer beat Rafael Nadal – or the Antichrist, as I tend to call him – in five sets.  This year’s outing, mirabile dictu, was the shortest since 2005.)  Although there’s never been anyone quite like Federer, Björn Borg is second on my all-time-favourites list (with his compatriot Stefan Edberg third).  In the 1970s and early 1980s, I was emotionally engaged in women’s tennis too, to an extent I never have been since.  I was a fervent Evonne Goolagong-Cawley supporter; the day before the Borg-McEnroe match in 1980, she had – at last – won her second Wimbledon, beating Chris Evert (Mrs John Lloyd as she then was).  That was enough nervous tension for one weekend.  I’d have been more than happy to go on a hike for the Saturday afternoon of the men’s final.  But I’d invited a friend round to the bedsit I rented in Willesden Green specifically to watch the match (he didn’t have a television at the time):  in the circumstances, even I couldn’t absent myself and leave John to it.  The consolation was that he was a serious Borg fan too.  We sat and suffered for four hours but, of course, it was worth it.

    The best thing about Borg vs McEnroe is that, thirty-seven years on, the right man still wins the match (1-6 7-5 6-3 6-7 (16-18) 8-6).  The film thus offers the unusual pleasure of a guaranteed and credible happy ending but there are a couple of potent stings in the tail.   Janus Metz and Ronnie Sandahl modify the popular myth that the two players were temperamentally polar opposites – Iceborg vs Superbrat.  As a junior player, Borg is just as prone to tantrums as McEnroe.  The teenage Borg eventually obeys the instruction of Lennart Bergelin (Stellan Skarsgård), who coached him throughout his career, never to show emotion on court but it continues to be a different matter behind the scenes.  Janus Metz stresses the stresses in the hero’s relationships with his fiancée Mariana Simionescu (Tuva Novotny) and with Bergelin; under the intense pressure of trying for a fifth consecutive Wimbledon win, Borg is often arguing with them, and battling his demons.  The textual postscript to the movie notes his retirement from tennis at the age of only twenty-six.  There’s no mention of his afterlife but plenty of the audience will be aware that it’s often been a difficult one – a story (a media story, at any rate) of failed marriages and business ventures, rumours of a drugs habit, an alleged suicide attempt.  The personal tensions the film describes give an edge to Borg’s lack of visible emotion during the match against McEnroe.  Awareness of what happened in later years induces a knottier feeling of sadness watching Borg on the screen.

    Watching John McEnroe and reflecting on his afterlife, and changed perceptions of him, produce a different kind of regret.  His friend and long-time doubles partner Peter Fleming, enjoying an unusually good run of form in singles in 1980, was McEnroe’s opponent in the Wimbledon quarter finals.  In the locker room after the match, Fleming (Scott Arthur) tells McEnroe that, in the long run, no one will remember him kindly because no one likes him.  If only.  McEnroe’s behaviour in the final itself was beyond reproach; the film suggests it was this that transformed his public image for good.  If only again.  With the passage of time, McEnroe’s outbursts at court officials have become part of Wimbledon lore – and nostalgia.  He’s remembered as a great player but, because he shouted and screamed, even more as a great ‘character’.  The perennial crown jewel in the BBC team at Wimbledon (he’s a highly articulate and often perceptive analyst), McEnroe nowadays chuckles along with his fellow commentators at the delightful memories of his you-cannot-be-serious days.  He’s proved to be a lamentably influential pioneer of ‘self-expression’ in tennis:  he may even have paved the way for intra-rally ululation, though he didn’t himself grunt or squeal when he hit a shot.  There’s an interesting bit in Borg vs McEnroe when Borg and Bergelin are watching McEnroe, in an early round at Wimbledon, on TV.  McEnroe gets angry, Bergelin declares excitedly that ‘He’s lost it’ but Borg disagrees.  It’s a short sequence and Metz may intend it simply to illustrate how anxiously keyed up Borg already is but I think it says a lot more, even if it doesn’t mean to.  I don’t doubt that McEnroe started out in tennis with genuine anger management issues but I think he discovered getting mad pumped him up helpfully during a match.  As I recall, McEnroe never misbehaved against Borg.  He didn’t need to – this was the one opponent against whom he was always sufficiently motivated.

    The film isn’t short of daft and/or lame touches.  The courtside commentators – especially a hearty English chap (David Bamber), who takes pride of place over assorted other nationalities – rank high in the daft category.  As you’d expect in this kind of story, there’s plenty of exposition.  A summary of how a tiebreak works is sensible; a conversation in which Vitas Gerulaitis (Robert Emms) tells McEnroe well-known facts about Borg – details of his manifold superstitions, the name of his girlfriend etc ­– is merely clumsy.  This is a Swedish film, which could explain (and excuse) why it doesn’t realise how ludicrous David Bamber sounds.  It also makes you appreciate this isn’t, in the country in which it was made, any old sports biography:  Björn Borg is Sweden’s greatest-ever international sportsman.  (His only credible rival is the alpine skier Ingemar Stenmark, Borg’s virtual contemporary.)   In spite of its title in the Anglophone world, the film is primarily about Borg.  Its Swedish release title – Borg – reflects that.  So does the careful casting of the main role.

    There are three ages of Borg:  Leo Borg [sic] plays him from the age of nine to the age of thirteen; Marcus Mossberg, who appears more briefly, is the older teenager; Sverrir Gudnason is the adult.  Even though the actors don’t facially resemble each other closely, there’s a credible continuity from one Borg incarnation to the next.  The personality that Leo Borg creates leaves a lasting impression that chimes with Sverrir Gudnason’s emotional portrait.  Gudnason bears a striking resemblance to Borg:  the actor has more regular, conventionally handsome features but these help reinforce the Viking hero aspect of the character.  He gets Borg’s round-shouldered slouch well.  In the Wimbledon action sequences, I wasn’t always sure when we were seeing Gudnason and when Henrik Sillanpää, credited as Borg’s ‘tennis double’.  (Or whether it was sometimes the real thing:  if there are inserts of actual match footage, they’ve been skilfully worked into the reconstruction of the final, filmed at a tennis arena in Prague.)  Either Gudnason or Sillanpää or both have done a brilliant job of replicating Borg’s court movement, especially on the forehand side.

    A couple of the early scenes in Monte Carlo are excellent – they have the ring of truth rather than of biopic.   Borg looks out from the balcony of a high-altitude apartment on the distant view below.   He moves forward onto the balcony railing as if preparing to throw himself off it, then into an extraordinary, very hazardous-looking, arm-strengthening exercise, using the railing.  Finding that he’s locked out of his car and desperate to avoid autograph hunters and other passers-by who call out and point at him, Borg takes refuge in a bar and orders a coffee.  He asks the bartender if he can pay later as he has no cash on him:  his wallet’s in the car.  The bartender says no but that if the customer can do a quick bit of manual labour – carrying boxes around and so on – that’ll do instead of money.  Borg obliges.  The two men have a conversation.  The superstar leaves the place without the bartender having a clue who he was.

    Although in his late thirties, Sverrir Gudnason is entirely convincing as an athlete in his mid-twenties.  The actual age difference between him and Shia LaBeouf, thirty when the film was shot, is greater than that between Borg and McEnroe yet LaBeouf seems much too old for Superbrat.  More specifically, his face looks longer and thinner than McEnroe’s, with its traces of puppy fat, did at the time; when he imitates McEnroe’s facial expressions, LaBeouf looks either miserable or mentally defective – he’s quite lacking in dynamic truculence.  (Paul Theroux memorably described the young McEnroe on court as ‘looking like a slightly swollen Shirley Temple playing Hiawatha on the warpath’.)  It seems that LaBeouf was attracted to the script partly because, with his own ‘bad boy’ media image, he empathised with McEnroe.  He doesn’t give a bad performance but he’s not helped by the McEnroe role being sketchier and more impersonally written than Borg’s.   There’s nothing to compare with the above-mentioned scenes in Monte Carlo; instead, we’re asked simply to note, for example, that McEnroe’s parents (Ian Blackman and Jane Perry) are unreasonably demanding of success – are, in other words, the root cause of their son’s screwed-up antics.  Whereas there are two young Borgs, there’s only one junior McEnroe.  Jackson Gann, who plays him, looks to be eleven or twelve.  In one scene, we see that young John has an autographed photo of Borg.  Even allowing that the latter was a precociously successful talent, winning his first French Open a few days before his eighteenth birthday, this pre-adolescent’s fan picture doesn’t make sense – Borg was less than three years older than McEnroe.

    The film’s version of the great match is somewhat anti-climactic because Metz tries to make it continuously, spectacularly exciting.  Tennis has an ingenious scoring system:  every point counts but only the last point counts.  That doesn’t mean, though, that every point is a thriller that has the crowd on their feet:  what’s often striking is that a sequence of points, each of them unremarkable individually, has slipped by in a way that alters the course of a game or set beyond recall.  The need for non-stop excitement at Wimbledon is a modern invention, epitomised by changes in commentary style.  In 1980, the BBC’s senior commentator Dan Maskell spoke just enough to keep viewers informed and to exclaim in admiration at great shots or in regretful disbelief at bad ones.  Nowadays, most of the BBC commentary box carry on a nearly non-stop conversation between points (it occasionally continues even during points).  The commentators are hyper-alert to shifts in the direction that a match is taking – in other words, they invent them.  They seem nervous that viewers will get bored unless there are frequent swings in momentum (as well as peripheral ‘entertainment’ in the form of the weirder sights among the Centre Court crowd, etc).

    These commentary tactics, no doubt dictated by audience research findings, are presumably an international phenomenon – and Janus Metz seems to be demonstrating in Borg vs McEnroe the present-day requirement of thrill-a-minute tennis.  In doing so, he fails to capture the shape and subtler fluctuations of the 1980 final:  the shocking ease with which McEnroe won the first set;  Borg’s patience in working his way back into the match; his inexorable progress to what looked sure to be a victory in four sets; McEnroe’s unexpected, repeated resistance in the tenth game of the fourth set and in the subsequent tiebreak;  Borg’s strength of will in overcoming the disappointment of seven championship points going west, reflected in his superb service games in the final set.  The fluctuating fortunes during the 34-point tiebreak were, inevitably, rapid and thrilling but in Borg vs McEnroe, they’re just the latest in an unbroken sequence of highlights.  The crowd in the movie goes as wild when Borg serves an ace at the start of the second set as when he hits the crosscourt backhand pass that sealed victory on his eighth championship point.  Excited involvement in a match, in those days, tended to be expressed through intense quiet rather than by voices in the crowd baying for their man or woman.  If you watch the last game of the 1980 final on YouTube, you’ll notice that the umpire never needs to issue a ‘Quiet, please’.  The hush is integral to the excitement.  Metz misses this crucial element.

    The film is in two minds about McEnroe’s popularity.  There’s a suggestion he’s a media sensation because so many people identify with him as a ‘rebel’; then that everyone in Britain hates him; then shots of wildly enthusiastic McEnroe supporters during the Wimbledon final (they can’t  already have been converted by his impeccable conduct that day).  I wonder what McEnroe aficionados feel about Borg vs McEnroe.  They must recognise that the 1980 final was the greatest match between their man and Borg, at the same time as being galled that the film concentrates on the only one of the pair’s four Grand Slam finals that the Swede won.  I came out of the cinema hoping I don’t live to see a movie about the Federer-Nadal rivalry.  If that were to focus on one of their three Wimbledon finals (to date), it would obviously, alas, be 2008.  On the other hand, if it was a Swiss-made film about a national hero …

    17 September 2017

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