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:
Here's the trailer:
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).