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What is love, and what is its worth? That's the burning question at the core of "The Deep Blue Sea" the latest from British master Terence Davies, a drama that burns with a blue flame intensity that is deeply beautiful and shattering all at once.
Our story picks up, as a title card tell us, somewhere "around 1950" in London. World War II is still a recent memory and while the country is still nursing its wounds, for Hester Collyer (Rachel Weisz), it seems she's survived a difficult battle of her own. Her marriage to William Collyer (Simon Russell Beale) has crumbled to the point where it's a relationship in name only. He's at least two decades her senior, and Hester longs for something more vital, passionate and yes, more physical as well, and she finds it in the boozy, charming and devilishly handsome WWII pilot Freddie Page (Tom Hiddleston). It's only a matter of time before William learns of the affair and his fury only pushes Hester further into the arms of Freddie, but when the pilot learns of her literally suicidal desire for love and lust, he fears where their relationship will lead.
In adapting Ratigan's play, Davies has stripped it right down to its three central characters with the focus primarily on Weisz who appears on screen for pretty much every minute of the run time. In playing Hester, the Oscar-winning actress wonderfully navigates the excitement, pain and confusion of a woman who married the first man she met and fell in love with the next man who made no secret of his feelings for her. But it's between those two spheres where Weisz finds a rippling undercurrent of complex emotions, with Hester battling against social mores, her own carnal nature, the concern she still feels for William, and her own inability to discern between love and lust. Davies' and Hoffmeister love Weisz's face and with her give a powerhouse performance that relies less on words and more on the subtly changing temperaments of a woman to whom suicide becomes a viable option. We are reminded of Nicole Kidman's opera concert scene from "Birth" to find an equal; Weisz so understands Hester that we are moved both when her eyes sparkle looking at Freddie in a pub early in the film, and when she recounts a distant memory of William much later in the picture.
And it's the meeting place between the actors' strong turns and Davies impeccably realized film where "The Deep Blue Sea" truly becomes something special and yes, one of the best films of the festival. The artful construction of the film -- one highlight being a tracking shot/flashback sequence in the London underground; another being the already released slow dance between Hester and Freddie (and is more powerful given its context) -- is built to accomodate the performances. These aren't just prettily framed scenes but logical extensions of feelings that are being wrought and wrenched over by this trio of actors on screen.
The deliberate pace, arguably stagey dialogue (though we had no issue with it) and precisely pitched tone and style may not be for everyone -- indeed, there were a handful of walkouts -- but if you're willing to submit yourself to the film, you will be rewarded immensely. Deeply romantic with a rich and rare comprehension of the volatile and consuming nature of love and the aching void that can be left in its wake, "The Deep Blue Sea" is well worth taking the plunge. [A]
This is a reprint of our review from TIFF.
1 Comment
Tailor | March 22, 2012 7:59 PM
I can't wait for this movie. Rachel Weisz is such a great actress and she never disappoints.