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Director David Mamet
Stars Nigel Hawthorne, Jeremy Nathan, Rebecca Pidgeon,
Gemma Jones, Guy Edwards, Matthew Pidgeon
Certificate n/a
Running time 104 mins
Made USA, 1999
WHY should a period
piece feel so dated? Terence Rattigan's play, based on the famous
Archer-Shee trial in 1910, is about justice and honour and all those
things little boys were taught to respect in the days when Britannia
ruled.
Ronnie Winslow (Guy Edwards), a 13-year-old cadet at Naval College,
is expelled for forging another boy's signature on a postal order.
Ronnie swears he didn't do it. Rather than let the matter rest, his
father (Nigel Hawthorne), a respectable bank manager, hires the most
famous barrister in the land (Jeremy Northam) and almost bankrupts
the family in the process.
David Mamet's adaptation is short on surprises. He opens the play
out a little, such as introducing scenes at the House of Commons,
which neither add nor convince, and yet fails to give an indication
of the public interest in the case, except through newspaper headlines
and talk of crowds at the door.
Within the confines of drawing room drama, set changes are discouraged.
Rattigan accepted this as a challenge. Movies don't operate that way.
They need to expand horizons. For Mamet not to go to court seems perverse.
Retreating into theatrical convention loses so much cinematically.
What dates the film is how emotionally shackled everyone appears.
Feelings are repressed to the point of torture. Catherine (Rebecca
Pidgeon), the intellectually free suffragette daughter, whose cool
assessment of social behavior sharpens the minds of those around her,
is engaged to a block of wood (Guards officer). Their passion has
the sexual frisson of silage. The most famous QC in the country would
rather choke on an aphorism than speak from the heart. As an exercise
in lip stiffening, "The Winslow Boy" is tops.
The Wolf
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