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Director
Deborah Warner
Stars Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, Jane BIrkin,
Keeley Hawes, Fiona Shaw, Lambert Wilson
Certificate n/a
Running time 100 mins
Made UK, 1999
DELICACY is not
something the cinema understands anymore. Producers equate the word
with taking a box office bath. Deborah Warner is one of London's most
exciting theatre directors. This is her first film, based on a novel
by Elizabeth Bowen, scripted by award-winning Irish writer, John Banville,
with a dream cast. Undoubtedly, it is a delicate piece.
The Anglo Irish aristocracy in the Twenties appeared as mirror images
of their English counterparts. On the surface, they behaved in the
same way, played the same games, lived in similar country houses and
rode to hounds. Underneath, however, they were very different. When
the IRA and Black & Tans fought each other in an increasingly vicious
guerrilla war, their loyalties were torn.
"The Last September" is supposed to portray the end of the Anglo Irish
toffs. It doesn't, really. It centres around Lois (Keeley Hawes),
teenage neice of Sir Richard (Michael Gambon) and Lady Naylor (Maggie
Smith), of whom it is said, "I have never met anyone so determined
to be in love." The ineffectual British officer (David Tennant), billeted
in the village, is infatuated, while her heart belongs to a renegade
terrorist (Gary Lydon), who is on the run and hiding in a disused
barn on the Naylor estate.
Warner has enormous sympathy for Lois and Hawes is wonderful in the
part. The rest of the upper-class hangers-on are not mocked, simply
encouraged to ridicule themselves. The eccentricity of Sir Richard
and witty observations of Lady Myra are celebrated rather than abused.
The pace is slow and the action, when it comes, muted. This is a mood
piece, unlike "Fools Of Fortune", which covered the same ground more
successfully in Pat O'Connor's 1990 film. The thing about delicacy
is that emotion can shatter it. Warner makes sure this doesn't happen.
The Wolf
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