One
Day
UK 2011 108
minutes
Director: Lone
Scherfig
Starring: Anne Hathaway, Jim
Sturgess, Jodie Whittaker, Ken Stott, Patricia Clarkson, Rafe Spall, Romola
Garai
Roger
Ebert
Upper class Dexter (Jim
Sturgess) and working class Emma (Anne Hathaway) graduate from the University
of Edinburgh on 15th July 1988; they spend the night together but decide
to remain just as friends. The story then
follows their respective lives on the same date over the next twenty years.
The film is based on
the award-winning novel of the same name by David Nicholls. He worked as an actor for a number of years
before writing several number novels as well as a number of TV and film
scripts. His screenplays include adaptations
of two his novels: Starter for 10 (2006)
and One Day (2011).
“Emma
and Dex throw away what should have been the prime of their lives. He wraps
himself up in coke and self-love; she hides herself in her own cocoon of
denial. The book's annual audit anatomised their folly in meticulous detail.
Their wasted years were mercilessly ticked off and the course of their delusion
was unerringly charted until they were subjected to deserved punishment.
This
is the chronicle of wasted youth, rich in emotional nuance and period detail,
that the book's snapshots encapsulated so tellingly. In the film's necessary
haste, they reveal only blurry banality. Perhaps this key element of the book
could have been conveyed through some means other than annual snapshots in a
way that would have been more compatible with a two-hour film. Perhaps not.”
There was also
criticism of Anne Hathaway’s Yorkshire accent, with one critic describing it as
all over the shop (“Sometimes she's from Scotland, sometimes she's from New
York, you just can't tell.”). Anne Hathaway
subsequently claimed that she watched Emmerdale
to help her as she found the accent “a challenge”.
Here's the trailer: