Posts Tagged ‘Dominic Cooper’

 

An Education

High School Confidential

December 11th, 2009

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In 1980, a 33-year-old Benny Mardones trolled and wailed on his one-hit wonder, slow-dance anthem, “Into the Night,” with the strained effort of Sisyphus at the crest of the hill.

She’s just sixteen years old
Leave her alone, they say
Separated by fools
Who don’t know what love is yet
But I want you to know

If I could fly
I’d pick you up
I’d take you into the night
And show you a love
Like you’ve never seen, ever seen

It’s, charitably, an unsettling ode. Because I was entering high school as the tune moved up the charts, the song’s refrain was particularly ominous. As a teen, it was hard enough vying with my peers for the attention of our female classmates; it was made an all-the-more daunting task when girls would be escorted to dances by mustached dates who owned their own cars, had their own apartments and whose yearbook photos were already becoming musty. Youth was sufficiently disconcerting without house parties being crashed by Keith Hernandez clones in Girbaud jeans.

It was Benny’s track looping in my head when I saw “An Education” the unevenly toned tale of a preternaturally composed and sophisticated 16-year-old’s romantic relationship with a flash, older man in early 1960s London. Based on Lynn Barber’s memoir, director Lone Scherfig’s fair yet unsustaining film follows the bright and mature Jenny (Carey Mulligan) as the Oxford hopeful embarks on a dubious courtship during a whirlwind last year of secondary school.

At home, Jenny is harried by an unyielding father (an arch Alfred Molina as Jack) who is obsessed with having his daughter gain entrance into Oxford. He insists on Latin and cello lessons as resume stuffers. One rainy day, after compulsory cello practice, she’s offered a ride in a slick car by a smooth man who must be nothing less than in his md-20s, even though his exact age is not revealed in the film. (In an illuminating interview, Barber told The Guardian this summer that the actual man who picked her up “was –he said – 27, but was probably in his late 30s.” The well-bred David (Peter Sarsgaard, adopting a more than passable English accent) begins to court the teen with the awareness of her parents. He treats Jenny to classical concerts, takes her to nightclubs, ushers her to a selective auction and introduces her to his wealthy friends Danny, (played ably by Dominic Cooper) and his dim girlfriend, Helen (a resoundingly good Rosamund Pike), who contorts her face into an assortment of befuddled expressions. Against this competition, Graham, a skittish but sweet classmate who pines for Jenny, doesn’t stand a chance. The film at this point doesn’t seem terribly concerned that it’s a school night every night for our teen.

Due to her father’s desperation to get his only daughter into a specific university — and her mother Margaret’s acquiescence (Cara Seymour, in a dutiful but thankless role) — Jenny is allowed to dash away with David for a weekend at Oxford, under the fabricated excuse that she’ll meet one of David’s former tutors, C.S. Lewis. Enveloped in this adult world of bon vivants and rapscallions, she becomes, predictably, bored with her high school life; in turn, the school’s headmistress (Emma Thompson, doing yeoman’s work) and her literature teacher, Miss Stubbs (Olivia Williams) are cast as parochial for their disapproval.

Despite a first-rate ensemble and attractive visuals – with pleasing cinematography by John de Borman, production design by Andrew McApline and set decoration by Anna Lynch-Robinson — “An Education” doesn’t have much novel to say about those gap years between adolescence and adulthood. Surprisingly, for a Nick Hornby script, the dialogue doesn’t sing; this is Hornby’s first screenplay since 1997’s “Fever Pitch.” Jenny doesn’t narrate the story, or keep a diary, or have a best friend in whom she confides. Mulligan provides a strong performance but the film feels episodic and it too often lacks emotional specifics. After David whisks her away to Paris for a weekend, Jenny sighs with almost forced naivety “I never did anything before I met you,” with the innocence of a gold medal winning teenaged gymnast breathlessly saying that “I’ve dreamt of this moment my whole life.” When the movie does confront the more serious consequences of the relationship, it skims over them. “An Education” even falls back on a musical montage of Jenny studying. Admittedly it would be quite boring to film a person reading in real-time, but the sequence feels like a replacement for insight into her attitudes and thoughts as she prepares for college life. And when her father undergoes a change of heart, it’s an example of how a movie can deliver an epiphany unearned. (But it does give him a chance to leave three biscuits and a cuppa at her bedroom door as an apologetic gesture.) At one point Jenny exclaims, “Silly schoolgirls are always getting seduced by glamorous older men.” Even silly schoolboys know that.


The Duchess

Keira, eléison

September 28th, 2008

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Four years ago, director Saul Dibb debuted with the present-day tale of a young, black Londoner emerging from a stint in jail with the dilemma of whether to assimilate into a familiar and destructive gun culture.  “Bullet Boy” was an intriguing topic undertaken, sadly, with a phlegmatic execution.  This year, Dibb returns with “The Duchess,” which, despite stark distinctions in race and class and an 18th century setting, addresses again the vexing theme of the ramifications of a skewed sense of duty.  But unlike its modern counterpart, “The Duchess” is robust, assured and, most usefully, buttressed by a performance from Keira Knightley in the title role which showcases that she is emerging as both a potentially substantive actress and a burgeoning movie star.

Gamine, limpid, and, at times, preternaturally thin on screen, Knightley has the air of an Avedon Harper‘s Bazaar portrait.  She is a mere slip of a girl, when she is wearing a slip. In the six years since her breakout role in “Bend It Like Beckham,“ Knightley has perfected the pretty-in-a-petticoat persona to such a degree that it can appear that she’s hemmed in contractually to a bodice.

So, as the 23-year-old Knightley evolves into adult roles, she could be well served by studying the example of Kate Winslet, whose early career trajectory has an eerie similarity to Knightley’s, but who quickly broke free from the costume-drama constraints.  Knightley appeared in “Pride and Prejudice” at the age of 20; Winslet starred in her own Austen venture, “Sense and Sensibility,” at the same age.  They both were swept up by blockbusters. Winslet, however, was able to follow her titanic success with decisive choices for roles and films outside of the comfort zone of the multiplexes. She seemed determined as an actress to seek out exceedingly intriguing characters in movies which, if not wholly satisfying, felt substantial. With demonstrative roles in the late 90s in “Hideous Kinky” and “Holy Smoke “ and more recently in, for example, “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” and “Little Children,“ Winslet has forged such a powerful resume that she must be considered, along with Cate Blanchett, amongst the elite on any list of the most respected actresses in the world.  Sadly, for Knightley, her massive hit became a franchise and the carnival ride appears to have no end in sight with a fourth version on the horizon, and while she has indicated that she‘s through swanning about, the paychecks on offer could sway even the most resolute thespian.

The role of Georgiana Spencer — a captivating celebrity of  late 18th century Georgian England who became the notorious Duchess of Devonshire, famed for her trendsetting fashion as well as her ardent Whig politics — could serve as a crossroads role for Knightley. It’s a costume drama but with a part presenting her with an opportunity to exude maturity and gravity.  She’s afforded in Spencer a character of a certain determined resistance toward the double standard of the age, where a male gentry’s amorous affairs were tolerated, while a woman’s were verboten.  Knightley emotes, but with a steely restraint, and she inflicts upon the character a genuine emotional tussle.  She’s delicate yet fills her part with flickers of gestures which underscore her torment.  She flashes an assortment of smiles — shy, knowing, beaming — but when she unfurls her Chiclets with conviction she can still deliver a wallop.

All of the recognizable roles of the powdered-wig brigade are in evidence in “The Duchess.”  Ralph Fiennes does yeoman’s work within the rigid boundaries of the familiar role of the cold, disinterested Duke.  He is effectively charmless but it’s a bit deflating that this gormless character doesn’t resort to “In Bruges” pyrotechnics.  Charlotte Rampling delivers an efficient turn as Georgiana’s mother, a doyen of propriety and her place.  It’s almost odd to hear Rampling speaking in English on film.  In her beguiling role as Bess Foster, Georgiana’s best friend, and, later, the object of a very peculiar arrangement, Hayley Atwell unveils a confident portrayal which suggests she will become a favorite of casting directors.  Taking on the “Colin Firth” role of Georgiana‘s dashing paramour — and what other word can one use in a film of this kind for the strapping love interest other than “dashing“ — Dominic Cooper plays Charles Grey with the proper amount of innocent longing and chest-expanding hubris.  The pithy Charles Fox, the prominent Whig politician with whom Georgiana verbally jousts, is performed with suitable panache by Simon McBurney.

Dibb should be commended for a handsome production filmed briskly, and for providing Knightley with the attention and room to luxuriate in her role. He seems like, and it’s not a bad thing, a 1930s director fawning over his leading lady; Knightley repays his adoration by clearly reveling in the role.

But she has reached a turning point, where her talent is evident but doubt remains as to whether she‘ll succumb to typecasting.  She needs an edgy part, an earthy role, and a character like Jane Fonda’s in “Klute” would help prevent the prototype Knightley has had a tendency to resort to from becoming an unimaginative trend. However, if she chooses the safer path, a route where her talent is usurped by box office aspirations or, simply, lackadaisical choices, it may have a domino effect, and one day, not too distantly but regrettably, she could be seen hawking a best-selling, half-hour workout infomercial, “Pilates of the Caribbean.”