Friday, December 7, 2007

Unpardonable Sins

Atonement [R]
Grade: C

I hate the ending of Atonement.

Let me repeat that. I hate the ending of Atonement.

Probably not for the reason that you might hate it. I picture whole theater’s worth of average moviegoers agog – some with delight, some with terror. Personally, I have no problem with its unorthodox nature. I prefer to be original in my cinematic displeasures.

Shortly put, the atonement isn’t that. After all, atonement is supposed to be a selfless act of contrition. Letting yourself off the hook isn’t selfless. It’s quite the opposite. And the act comes from a character who, even years down the road, never quite grasps that it isn’t all about her.

The ending descends into a writer’s occupational hazard – the flabby self-regard for the redemptive power of words. As if writing about something amounts to an adequate apology for doing it. If that’s what artists need to get out of bed in the morning, great. But please don’t expect me to automatically buy it. And please don’t send in the string section to kneecap me if I don’t.

Of course, prettying things up is kind of what this movie does. Director Joe Wright and cinematographer Seamus McGarvey over-flavor the magic-hour compositions of an English estate and the French countryside. Even the mud at Dunkirk Beach looks beautiful; one imagines a million interns pouring water into the sand until the gray shade fit the vision. Wright’s ecstatic glow rightly illuminated Pride and Prejudice, decked as it was in swoony romantic ardor. But here, it seems as if the film is deeply afraid of getting its hands too dirty.

Or perhaps I’m wrong. Perhaps there is room for ambiguity in the finale. Perhaps the beauty of the scenery equates to the emotional sweetening of a memory, of psychological beautification, of a person straining to tell a story as a desperate stab at unachievable peace. Perhaps I get what the violin boys do not.

If so, that would fit perfectly with this post-modern story of multiple perspectives, adapted from the 2002 Ian McEwan novel. Mistaken impressions shape the understanding of reality. The power of storytelling plays on minds. At its center is the way a fanciful 13-year-old girl and her fragile grasp on adult reality ruin the lives of two she loves.

The girl is Briony Tallis (Saoirse Ronan), a precocious child with mustard-colored hair and a mayonnaise-thick imagination, living with her family on a brilliant English estate in 1935. She has just finished typing up her first naive play, one that she treats with the seriousness of Ibsen. Out a window she will observe something she doesn’t understand, an exchange between her sister Cecilia (Keira Knightley) and the housekeeper’s handsome son Robbie (James McAvoy).

There’s an unrealized sexual potential between them, one that’s hidden from the young girl’s comprehension, drunk as it is with adolescent melodrama. Small details will lead Briony to conclude Robbie is a rapacious sex fiend. By the end of the night – with an assist from the year’s epidemic of conveniently inept cinematic police work – she wrongly will finger him for a crime.

As war approaches, Robbie will join the army to gain release from prison, wander lost and scared through the French countryside, and drag his thirsting body onto a Heavenly. Hellish vision of Dunkirk. There, in a single shot as memorable as it is overblown, the English desperately shoot their horses, play on an abandoned pommel horse and drift above the surface on a looming Ferris wheel. Knightley will choose love over family, and become a penniless wartime nurse in London, waiting for the return of her love. A grown Briony (Romola Garai) realizes her mistake and, also coming to London to nurse war-thrashed soldiers, seeks some method of forgiveness.

There is a sly foreboding to the acting, a sense of something lying underneath Knightley’s posh coolness, Ronan’s flighty intelligence, McAvoy’s casual charm that evolves with fate and war. For McAvoy and Knightley, the film’s able romantic tinge holds the potential of legitimate box office stardom. In a year of fine films with scant epic romantic sweep, this film sticks out, making it an Oscar front-runner.

Yet the real conflict in the movie is not a war from sixty years ago, nor the struggles of torn lovers, nor a guilt-racked soul. It’s a battle between being a classic Hollywood star-crossed weepy and the edgy post-modern novel from which it extends. Even if it does pretty well with the elements individually, it still creates a movie that splits the difference, which is its unpardonable sin.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

lol, nice review. Your reaction is funny but good.

1)Thats the whole point of the story - make you think about Briony and who she was.

She couldnt deal with her crime and how it affected the people she loved, so decided to rewrite history through her art.

2) Yeah its glossy. But the detail was there to serve Briony's prose/narrative. She turned Robbie and Cecilia into fictional characters and flowered up the scenery (that was the intention anyway)

3)Investigation - Class issue. Plus Briony was thought to be reliable witness

K. Bowen said...

Zen,

I do think I'm coming around somewhat on the flowery scenery. My initial reaction was to see it as an inappropriate continuation of the glowing loveliness of Pride and Prejudice (a film I like a great deal, btw). But others have made this point, and I concede that it's a good explanation.

As far as the investigation ... I still think it's too much of a literary conceit for my taste. For me, it crossed the line of (im)plausibility. While, yes, they might well have arrested him and stuck him in the pokey that night on suspicion. But even with the class consideration, I have a hard time believing that a case against him would have stood a chance. I've written up a post on this, and will post it probably later today.

Good points, and thank you for the visit.

Pinko Punko said...

See, I'm not the only one that feels the class issue was completely legit. Think about Mr. Corrupt Sheriff you used to cover- could you trust that guy?

K. Bowen said...

My Dear Friend Pinko,

True, that particular Sheriff would be less than trustworthy. But that would be a corrupt investigation, not an incompetent one, as this one seems to be.

K. Bowen said...

And besides, that sheriff would have been too busy playing golf to actually interfere in a relatively run-of-the-mill investigation