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Atonement


Directed by: Joe Wright
Starring: James McAvoy
Genre:
Romance/Drama/
Action-Adventure
Run Time: 130
min.
Release Date:
December 2007
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
With multiple award
nominations and plenty of news hype, I decided to check out ATONEMENT
strictly to see what all the hubbub was about. Is it over-hyped or does
it stand out as “The Best Picture of 2007"?
The answer is both yes and no.
Visually it a feast for the eyes. The routing of the English army into
Dunkirk is nothing short of amazing. Let me clarify that, too. We don’t
see the battle leading to Dunkirk but do see the aftermath in all its
horribleness. The crumpled structures and damaged soldiers are dark and
forbidding, and hold the viewers eyes even though one wants to look away
from the destruction and seeming madness plastered on the screen. This
was the most intense sequence in the entire film. It was also shot in a
most uncommon way, with the camera initially following James McAvoy’s
character and then the camera splits from him and goes off on its own,
but returns to McAvoy later. An interesting way to shoot this series of
events.
The costumes, sets, and props were perfect. There was not a single thing
that took me out of the 1930s and 1940s. Specifically I enjoyed the
woolen army uniforms, the streets of early London, and the nursing
uniforms the young women wore (again, all perfect).
The acting was good. James McAvoy (THE
LAST KING OF SCOTLAND) steals most of the show as the
good-natured but ultimately wronged Robbie Turner, an educated
groundskeeper at a wealthy estate owned by the family of Cecilia Tallis (Keira Knightley,
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN). Knightley does a
fair job as Cecilia, a young woman in love with Robbie, a man far
beneath her station. When Robbie is wrongfully accused of a heinous
crime, Cecilia has to decide between her family or her eventual life
with Robbie.
But more powerful than Knightley was Romola Garai who plays her sister
Briony. Briony is the one responsible for wrongfully turning Robbie over
to the authorities after witnessing what she believed to be him
performing a crime against a child. It is Briony who really rules the
movie, giving us her fervent wish for “atonement” later in life after
realizing what damage she’s caused both Robbie and her sister.
The powerful Vanessa Redgrave (VENUS) plays the aged Briony as the film
progresses to the modern day and we learn how futile Briony’s wish for
atonement are. Although Mrs. Redgrave gives an astounding few minutes on
film, it is only a few minutes. There’ve been rumors that she’ll garner
some award for this performance, but I hope that these rumors are
unfounded. Don’t get me wrong; she did a fine job. But her brief
performance doesn’t warrant any kind of prize.
Listing the good above, I have to point out that the story is not an
uncommon one. This is a war story, something we’ve seen time and again.
Director Joe Wright does some interesting camera work and manipulations
with time, but some might feel this as an attempt to force something new
on a genre movie goers are all too familiar with.
That said, one needs to be prepared for an uncharacteristic ending. If
you’re looking for a feel-good,
man-returns-home-and-marries-girl-and-they-have-fifty-grandkids kind of
movie, this one isn’t going to make your happy tears list.
This is a mixed bag as far as films go. An overused premise with some
uniquely new ideas.
But is it “The Best Film of 2007"? It does have some of the best
cinematography and great acting thanks to Romola Garai. But it's not the
best. That prize I’m reserving for
NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN.
(back to top) |
Image from Atonement

DVD cost: $18.88
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The set of Dunkirk, built
at Redcar, was the most expensive set, costing an estimated 1 million
pounds.
Movie Quote: "No
matter how hard I work, I can't escape from what I did and what it
meant."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Atonement
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