Showing posts with label Anne-Marie Duff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anne-Marie Duff. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Suffragette

This film came out last year and I missed it, so I was delighted when we chose to screen it in January and it turned out to be well worth seeing.

I remember while I was studying A Level History the BBC screened a series about the Suffragettes called Shoulder to Shoulder. I'd already found the period interesting and so was hooked on the series. Inevitably the constraints of a feature film disallow extended narratives, so the story focuses on a fictional character, with the real figures in supporting roles.

I thought it worked really well, although it was a little unfair to Asquith's government as it did not mention any of the other pressures it faced nor any of its achievements (let alone the approach of war in 1914). Disclosure: if I had gone through to the second round of Mastermind my specialist subject would have been the life of  H H Asquith.

But enough of me: here are my notes...

Suffragette

UK 2015                                  106 minutes

Director:                                  Sarah Gavron

Starring:                                   Carey Mulligan, Anne-Marie Duff, Helena Bonham Carter, Brendan Gleeson and Meryl Streep

Awards and Nominations

  • Won Best Actress (Carey Mulligan) and Best Supporting Actor (Brendan Gleeson) at the British Independent Film Awards plus nominations for Best Supporting Actress for Helena Bonham Carter and Anne-Marie Duff
  • A further 12 wins and 12 nominations

“While Abi Morgan’s script for The Iron Lady parked politics in favour of personal appraisal, this altogether more polemical work provides a solidly researched and at times surprisingly grim primer on the years leading up to Emily Wilding Davison’s still contested act of self-sacrifice in 1913… Morgan intertwines socioeconomic detail with domestic melodrama as Maud [Carey Mulligan] leads us from the fringes of the fight to the firing line, her composite character providing a thumbnail sketch of collective oppression into which Mulligan breathes admirable individuality. Meryl Streep provides a fleetingly aloof cameo as Emmeline Pankhurst, rallying the troops from the balcony before disappearing into the night, but the real firebrand is Helena Bonham Carter as chemist Edith Ellyn, who provides the movement’s combustible spark.”


Mark Kermode

In 1912 Maud Watts (Carey Mulligan), a laundress becomes involved in the Suffragette movement led by Mrs Pankhurst (Meryl Streep), and after taking part in a protest is sent to jail. Her increasing involvement in the movement leads to the end of her marriage, and Maud takes part in further demonstrations culminating in a planned protest at the Derby in 1912, as a result of which Emily Davison (Natalie Press) is knocked down and killed by the King’s horse.

The film is based on historical events and although Maud Watts and her family are fictional it also portrays some historical characters. In 1903 Mr Pankhurst and her daughters had set up the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) to promote its aims of women’s suffrage through highly visible public campaigns. Asquith’s government had refused to allow a vote on the issue so the WSPU initiated a campaign of violence to publicise its aims, although many historians including Asquith’s biographer Roy Jenkins agree this “clearly damaged the cause”. The campaign led to jail sentences for many of those who took part and as a response the government passed the Cat and Mouse Act in 1913, to allow the release of those whose hunger strikes had made them ill, in an attempt to prevent the suffragettes from gaining public sympathy. This led to an effective stalemate and it was only the outbreak of war in 1914 that made Mrs Pankhurst end the campaign of militancy in order to support the government’s stance against the “German Peril”.

In 1916 the Speaker of the House of Commons set up a conference to examine electoral reform and in 1917 presented its report which included a recommendation for limited women’s suffrage. As Prime Minister Asquith had opposed women’s suffrage, but after being ousted by Lloyd George he now supported the idea. In1918 Lloyd George’s government gave the vote to women over the age of thirty and it was Asquith’s earlier reforms to the House of Lords during the struggle to pass the People’s Budget in 1909 and 1910 that helped its passage through Parliament.

Screenplay writer Abi Morgan started her career by writing for TV before moving into film where her work includes the screenplays for Brick Lane (2007), The Iron Lady (2011) and Shame (2011). Sarah Gavron started her career making documentaries, but kept return to narrative filmmaking because of her desire to tell stories. Her first feature film was Brick Lane (2007).

Suffragette is the first film to be shot on location in the Houses of Parliament.

 Here is the trailer:
 
 

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Before I Go To Sleep

I'd not read the book that this film was based on, and it would have been interesting to see how the novelist managed to conceal some of the more incongruous elements of the story.  As it was, the film was very entertaining g, with a real shock coming from the two male leads who were very definitely cast against type.

Here are my notes:

Before I Go to Sleep

USA 2014                    92 minutes

Director:                      Rowan Joffe

Starring:                        Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Mark Strong and Anne-Marie Duff

“...an enjoyable shaggy dog story with a twist that will leave you with the strange feeling that you've seen all this before, even if you can't quite remember where.”
 

Mark Kermode

Christine (Nicole Kidman) is a middle-aged woman who wakes each day with no memory of her life from her mid-20s onward, so every morning Ben (Colin Firth) has to tell her that he is her husband, she was in an accident, and as a result of this she is suffering from amnesia.  But one day while Ben is at work a call from Dr Nasch (Mark Strong) informs Christine about a camera on which she has been keeping a secret video diary.

The film is based on the recent bestselling novel by S J Watson, but the subject of amnesia has long been popular with film makers:  Hitchcock’s Spellbound (1945) is a classic Hollywood film while more recently in Memento (2000) Christopher Nolan tells the story of his amnesiac hero by interspersing black-and-white sequences that tell a chronological story with colour sequences in reverse chronological order (the DVD allows viewers to restructure the film so that they can see it with a conventional chronology). 

In his perceptive review of Before I Go to Sleep Mark Kermode also notes key similarities with the plot of Wolfgang Petersen’s Shattered, another film about an amnesiac:

“I don't know whether Joffe is familiar with Petersen's 1991 oddity but his film certainly seems to remember it well.”

Rowan Joffe is the son of director , best known for The Killing Fields (1984) and The Mission (1986), and the actress Jane Lapotaire.  After winning awards for his screen writing he directed his first film The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall for TV which won a BAFTA in 2009.  He followed this with his own adaptation of Brighton Rock (2011).  His other screenplay credits include 28 Weeks Later (2007) and the George Clooney vehicle The American (2010).

 Here's the trailer: