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Wetherby

 
Movies:

Wetherby

  • Director: David Hare
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Mystery
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Haunted By the Past, Suicide
  • Main Cast: Vanessa Redgrave, Ian Holm, Judi Dench, Stuart Wilson, Marjorie Yates, Tim McInnerny
  • Release Year: 1985
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 97 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In a novel and intriguing approach to storytelling, director David Hare has created an engaging mystery and human drama that ostensibly focuses on an innocent dinner party but is really about something else. Jean Travers (Vanessa Redgrave) is an old-maid schoolmarm who has lived in Wetherby, a small town in northeastern Yorkshire, all of her life. She is still haunted by memories of a passionate love affair with a young man who was later murdered while on military duty in Malaysia nearly 35 years ago in the '50s. One evening, Jean invites a group of friends over for dinner; the group is comprised of two couples, one of which spends the time sniping at each other. A young man, John Morgan (Tim McInnerny) is also in the dinner party. Jean thinks he was brought along by one of the couples; the couples, in turn, believe he was invited by Jean -- in short, he is a total stranger that everyone assumes is a friend of someone there. As the evening progresses, political topics of the moment are brought up and chewed over; Margaret Thatcher, Richard Nixon, and other notables of the era are discussed, and various comments are made on the laziness of today's youth. The dinner party ends, and the next day John Morgan comes back to visit Jean. While she is in the midst of preparing tea for them both, he takes out a gun and kills himself. The shock waves from his senseless act later reverberate among the dinner-party guests, as the police investigator tries to piece together the man's background and the dinner party itself. Questions are raised about his motives, and viewers see the dinner party again, moment by moment, in an entirely new light. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

Review

Wetherby, David Hare's directorial debut, carries out its elliptical narrative with such artistry and high-mindedness, a viewer might be tempted to overlook its somewhat ponderous conclusion. Vanessa Redgrave leads a stalwart cast that lends the film instant credibility, and while this has the effect of conditioning viewers for great things, it shouldn't dull their expectation for clear resolutions. Even in such a smartly unconventional mystery, the clues and fragments need to pay off in more satisfying ways than they do. Ian Holm, Tom Wilkinson, and Judi Dench join Redgrave in lending their considerable talents, but it's lesser-known Tim McInnerny who commands the viewer's attention, establishing a chilling undercurrent the moment he randomly shoots himself in the home of a horrified professor (Redgrave). As Jean Travers pieces together why she's been targeted as a witness -- perhaps knowing more than she's letting on -- the film dips seamlessly in and out of the present, the recent past, and the distant past. The director, better known as a playwright, has done well to make Wetherby more than just a filmed play. The scenes are composed dynamically, some of them entirely free of dialogue, or even sound. Paradoxically, it's Hare's content that can be a little fuzzy. The last days in the distraught stranger's life are rich with foreboding, but these sections are overshadowed by Hare's ill-advised preoccupation with Jean as a schoolgirl involved in an affair. The thematic similarities between the distant past and the present are quite strained, but Hare asserts their interconnectedness by revealing the climaxes of both storylines in a sequence of alternating shots. This only underscores the false significance assigned to their relationship. Wetherby is the unusual case of an acclaimed writer showing more fitness with form than ideas. Still, he succeeds enough at both to earn high praise. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Suzanna Hamilton - Karen Creasy; Joely Richardson - Young Jean Travers; Katy Behean - Young Marcia; Ted Beyer - Police Sergeant; Penny Downie; Christopher Fulford - Arthur; Matthew Guinness - Randall; Robert Hines - Jim Mortimer; Bert King - Mr. Mortimer; Marjorie Sudell; Tom Wilkinson - Roger Braithwaite; David Foreman - Young Malay; Peter Martin - Helpful Parent; Patrick Blackwell; Ian Bleasdale - Neurotic Teacher; Howard Crossley - Police; Brenda Hall; Jonathan Lazenby - Boatman; Trevor Lunn - Pretentious Parent; Richard Marris - Sir Thomas; Norman Mills - Drama Teacher; Guy Nicholls - Mr. Varley; Stephanie Noblett - Suzie Bannerman; John Robert - Page; Nigel Rooke - Page; Vanessa Rosenthal - Pretentious Parent; Paula Tilbrook - Mrs. Mortimer; Diane Whitley; Mike Kelly - CID Policeman

Credit

Jamie Leonard - Art Director, Patsy Pollock - Associate Producer, Jane Greenwood - Costume Designer, Lindy Hemming - Costume Designer, David Hare - Director, Chris Wimble - Editor, Nick Bicat - Composer (Music Score), Tony Britten - Composer (Music Score), Tony Britten - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jeanne Richmond - Makeup, Hayden Griffin - Production Designer, Stuart Harris - Cinematographer, Simon Relph - Producer, Jamie Leonard - Set Designer, David Hare - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Wetherby (film)
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Wetherby
Directed by David Hare
Produced by Simon Relph
Written by David Hare
Starring Vanessa Redgrave
Ian Holm
Tim McInnerny
Judi Dench
Joely Richardson
Tom Wilkinson
Stuart Wilson
Suzanna Hamilton
Music by Nick Bicât
Cinematography Stuart Harris
Distributed by MGM/UA Classics
Release date(s) United States 19 July 1985
Running time 102 min.
Country United Kingdom UK
Language English

Wetherby is a 1985 British drama film written and directed by David Hare, known as one of the leading British playwrights of his generation.

Contents

Plot synopsis

Set in the town of Wetherby in West Yorkshire, the film focuses on Jean Travers, a middle-aged spinster schoolteacher. One evening, she invites married friends for a dinner party, only to have some terrible repressions and past traumas dredged up when guest John Morgan expresses his emotional pain. The strange young man arrives at Jean's cottage the next morning with a gift of pheasants. While sitting at the kitchen table waiting for tea, he inexplicibly and without warning puts the barrel of a gun in his mouth and kills himself.

From this point onward, the film's story is told in chronologically discrete, interlocking flashbacks to the recent and distant past, showing actions and events as seen and experienced from various points of view. The central mystery of Morgan's suicide is the fulcrum around which the narrative turns. The narrative construction of the film resembles a jigsaw puzzle and, in keeping with Hare's style of exposition, frequently appears to have key pieces missing.

There are further scenes of the dinner party as well as scenes of the police investigation into the suicide. We learn Morgan had not been an invited guest; he walked in with others who assumed he was expected, and Jean assumed her friends had brought him with them. An aloof young woman named Karen Creasy, a classmate of Morgan, is delivered from the funeral to Jean's doorstep by Mike Langdon, one of the policemen conducting the inquest, and the girl insinuates herself into Jean's life and shows no sign of leaving. Sullen, self-centered, and seemingly devoid of motivation, Karen is unmoved by John's death, and is even hostile to his memory. It is later explained that Morgan had developed an obsession with Karen when they were both students at the University of Essex, and she had harshly rebuffed his attempts to initiate a relationship with her. It is implied this rejection may have been the precipitating factor in his decision to leave Essex for Wetherby with the intention of committing suicide.

When Jean suggests to Karen she may have been responsible for John's decision to kill himself, the young woman angrily denies that her behavior was — or is — in any way provocative. She makes it clear she resists and resents deep emotional connections with people, including Jean, and promptly leaves Wetherby for good.

In addition to the events occurring in the present day, there are flashbacks of Jean and her lifelong friend, Marcia, as teenagers in 1953. These scenes reveal Jean had been engaged to airman Jim Mortimer, and that she failed to stop him from going away on active service. In a cruel twist of fate, Jim was senselessly murdered in a gambling den during the anti-imperial uprisings in British Malaya.

As these episodes from the past and present criss-cross and overlap, Jean begins to understand the dull resentment and lonely despair that drove Morgan to take his life and seems to gain some insight into the restlessness and self-destructive impulses of the younger generation. In a related incident, she tries to convince one of her female students about the value of continuing her education; at the end of the film, Jean is told the girl has dropped out of the sixth form to run away to London, presumably with a boyfriend.

Jean is affected by the diminished hopes of her contemporaries, who deplore the state of the country under Thatcherism, which she regularly discusses with Stanley Pilborough, Marcia's husband and the town solicitor, who is often purposefully drunk. She observes the unhappy marriages of her middle-aged friends, particularly the endless bickering that goes on between Roger and Verity Braithwaite. Lonely, despondent Mike Langdon discusses with her the failure of his relationship with his mistress, Chrissie, who eventually leaves him to return to her sheep farmer husband.

In the end, it seems Jean no longer needs to mourn for the life she might have had — and the person she might have become — had she not allowed her fiancé to make his fatal departure for Malaya three decades earlier.

Principal cast

Critical reception

In her review in the New York Times, Janet Maslin observed the film was written "with a playwright's ear for elegant dialogue and a playwright's portentous sense of symmetry. While the former is certainly welcome on the screen, the latter is less at home, and it serves to make Wetherby a peculiar hybrid not entirely suited to either medium . . . the film's momentum varies unpredictably, with a rhythm that is sometimes abrupt, sometimes languid. Equally uneven is the acuteness of the dialogue, with passages that are particularly pointed interspersed with those whose bearing is at best indirect . . . However, Mr. Hare has assembled a superb cast, and its ensemble work is very fine . . . Miss Redgrave's warm, credible performance is very much the heart of the film. She brings to the character a crisp intelligence and a very deep compassion, while still managing to make every movement a surprise."[1]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times called it "a haunting film, because it dares to suggest that the death of the stranger is important to everyone it touches - because it forces them to decide how alive they really are."[2]

Time Out London notes, "Redgrave's performance is superb and she's ably supported by Holm, Dench, and Hamilton in particular."[3]

Awards and nominations

References

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Love Streams
Golden Bear winner
1985
tied with Die Frau und der Fremde
Succeeded by
Stammheim

 
 

 

Copyrights:

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