Film: Vanity Fair
Friday, February 11th, 2005 02:12 pmMost enjoyable, but criminally under-publicised. We'd been meaning to see Vanity Fair for some time: it'd been advertised at the local UGC, and then the posters disappeared ... and, after a while, it seemed clear that it wasn't Coming Soon after all.
Flipping through Vindigo [not nasty phoneware but original free Palm-OS version) yesterday, I noticed it was still playing at the Odeon Wardour Street (which I'd never been to before: right down the Leicester Square end; third floor, via lifts; empty; very orange; £5!), and yesterday was the last day.
Interesting and credible cast. Reese Witherspoon (Becky Sharp) has gone up immensely in my estimation and held her accent all the way through: Jonathan Rhys-Meyers v. Pretty, and somehow they found a kid who's the spitting image of him, or possibly made one up with CGI: Eileen Atkins steals the show as a thoroughly acidic Matilda Crawley.
This is not a film of Thackeray's novel, but one based on it (even more loosely than Peter Jackson based his LOTR trilogy on Tolkien). Had to flip through plot-summary of novel to work out just how different it was. Probably most controversial: Becky's all redeem'd, manipulative and clever and emotionally chilly but nevertheless likeable and hard-done-by. Have only just noticed the tagline: all's fair in love and war. Thackeray no doubt rolling in grave. Ah well.
Mira Nair's a splendid director: Mychael Danna's soundtrack generally OK, though didn't care for his setting of 'Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal' (lyrics by Tennyson, b. 1809, so what is it doing at a party a few years after the Battle of Waterloo?): locations gorgeous: storyline slightly choppy, as there's a lot of plot to fit in. Worth a watch on DVD: I don't understand why it didn't do better.
Flipping through Vindigo [not nasty phoneware but original free Palm-OS version) yesterday, I noticed it was still playing at the Odeon Wardour Street (which I'd never been to before: right down the Leicester Square end; third floor, via lifts; empty; very orange; £5!), and yesterday was the last day.
Interesting and credible cast. Reese Witherspoon (Becky Sharp) has gone up immensely in my estimation and held her accent all the way through: Jonathan Rhys-Meyers v. Pretty, and somehow they found a kid who's the spitting image of him, or possibly made one up with CGI: Eileen Atkins steals the show as a thoroughly acidic Matilda Crawley.
This is not a film of Thackeray's novel, but one based on it (even more loosely than Peter Jackson based his LOTR trilogy on Tolkien). Had to flip through plot-summary of novel to work out just how different it was. Probably most controversial: Becky's all redeem'd, manipulative and clever and emotionally chilly but nevertheless likeable and hard-done-by. Have only just noticed the tagline: all's fair in love and war. Thackeray no doubt rolling in grave. Ah well.
Mira Nair's a splendid director: Mychael Danna's soundtrack generally OK, though didn't care for his setting of 'Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal' (lyrics by Tennyson, b. 1809, so what is it doing at a party a few years after the Battle of Waterloo?): locations gorgeous: storyline slightly choppy, as there's a lot of plot to fit in. Worth a watch on DVD: I don't understand why it didn't do better.
no subject
Date: Friday, February 11th, 2005 03:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Friday, February 11th, 2005 03:43 pm (UTC)Perhaps because the distributors took an executive decision on how long it would run before it even opened, so it never got the chance to do better. I suspect this happens with a lot of films, especially modestly budgeted period dramas like (fr'instance) Stage Beauty: distributor gets cold feet about likely audience demographic, so books only a few screens for a short period; film gets good write up, but not much money allocated for publicity to begin with so nothing left to capitalise on this; film closes before audience can find it. Makes me very annoyed.
no subject
Date: Friday, February 11th, 2005 03:53 pm (UTC)Of course, I just finished reading Heyer's "An Infamous Army" so I'm also a wee bit dubious about Mira Nair's ability to deal with anything Waterloo-ish at anything like the level I've now come to like and expect.
no subject
Date: Friday, February 11th, 2005 04:12 pm (UTC)