DIRECTOR/SCREENWRITER
Anthony
Minghella
based on the
novel by
Michael
Ondaatje
PRODUCER
Saul Zaentz
CINEMATOGRAPHER
John Seale
MUSIC
Gabriel Yared
EDITOR
Walter Murch
CAST
Ralph Fiennes (Laszlo de Almásy)
Juliette Binoche (Hana)
Willem Dafoe (Caravaggio)
Kristin Scott Thomas (Katharine Clifton)
Naveen Andrews (Kip)
Colin Firth (Geoffrey Clifton)
Julian Wadham (Madox)
Jürgen Prochnow (Major Muller)
MPAA rating: R
Running
time: 160m
U.S. release: November 15, 1996
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other Anthony
Minghella films
reviewed on this website:
- The
Talented Mr. Ripley
|
There
seems to be no middle ground with Michael Ondaatje's popular
novel The English Patient: either you can't put it down,
or you put it down after two pages and never pick it up again.
As someone in the latter group, I was still eager to see the
film version. Often, the most compulsively readable books become
unwatchable movies (Sleepers),
while the most wildly unreadable books blossom into enthralling
cinema (Naked Lunch).
Writer-director Anthony Minghella's film of The English Patient
makes me want to take another crack at the book. I've read that
Minghella is faithful to Ondaatje's plot and time-hopping narrative,
and he has found visual equivalents of the famously luscious
prose that hooked so many readers (and stood between me and the
story). The mysteries and surprises are still there (I will reveal
none), but the romance is more central.
At its core, this is the story of a man who risks everything
and loses it. We meet the "English patient" of the
title (Ralph Fiennes), burned almost beyond recognition after
his plane is shot down in the North African desert during World
War II. In the last days of the war, he is tended in a wrecked
monastery by the kindly nurse Hana (Juliette Binoche). He says
he remembers nothing; his frequent flashbacks prove otherwise.
The patient, it turns out, is a Hungarian count named Almásy.
Before the war, Almásy works with British cartographers
mapping the sands of the Sahara. There he meets the alluring
but married Katharine (Kristin Scott Thomas). A howling sandstorm
finds them cooped up tight in a jeep; it's the start of a beautiful
relationship, and a neat metaphor for the way their lives will
continue to be sand-blasted by the fates.
Half of the movie is Almásy's bed-ridden reverie, and
I expected the nurse Hana to fall in love with her scarred but
yearning patient, competing with Katharine's memory. Not so.
Instead, Hana finds love with the sensitive mine-patroller Kip
(Naveen Andrews), and Willem Dafoe turns up as a saturnine thief
who warns Hana not to put a halo on Almásy any time soon.
Minghella, best known for the honestly moving Truly Madly
Deeply, doesn't shy away from overwhelming romance; he runs
toward it with a clear head. And clear eyes: photographed by
John Seale, this is easily the most ravishing film of the year.
The sand seems to drench the actors in deep golden light; the
sky is a rich, muted blue, like a still and suspended sea.
If there's a flaw, it lies with Binoche, a capable but rather
opaque actress (as she was in Blue). Otherwise, the cast
is impeccable. Kristin Scott Thomas finally gets the major role
she deserves, and she plays it eagerly and elegantly. Ralph Fiennes,
playing both an evasive, obsessed lover and a shattered wreck
of a man, powerfully fuses Almásy's past and present.
Almásy thinks he can read anything: foreign languages,
maps, Herodotus, people. What he can't read, tragically, is himself.
And in the end he is a map of scars read by Hana. Some would
credit Ondaatje for the great story. Duly noted. But praise is
equally due Anthony Minghella for making it a fine movie. |