Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1

UFFRAGETTE


blows the dust
off history in an
involving women-
driven drama with
a political thriller
element and thought-
provoking contemporary relevance for
men and women equally. Somehow
‘suffragettes’ — originally a twee term for
suffragists coined in derision by aDaily
Mailjournalist and gleefully embraced
by the women’s movement — have
acquired a quaint image as shrill ladies
in bloomers who chained themselves to
railings. People have forgotten British
women were beaten tortured and died
to win the right to vote that too many
now neglect to exercise.
Screenwriter Abi Morgan cleverly
sidesteps the leaders of the movement
— largely privileged educated women
frustrated by social and economic

Suff ragette


★★★★
OUT OCTOBER 12 / CERT. 12A / 106 MINS.

DIRECTOR Sarah Gavron
CAST Carey Mulligan Helena Bonham
Carter Brendan Gleeson Anne-Marie
Duff Ben Whishaw Meryl Streep

PLOT In 1912 laundress Maud Watts
(Mulligan) is fearful of the militant
suffragettes urging her to join them.
But a lifetime’s abuse and humiliation
eventually drive her to act in hope
of a better future.

inequities — and focuses on the foot
soldier a working woman wife and
mother. Carey Mulligan’s touching Maud
has spent her life toiling in a grim laundry.
Marriage to Sonny (Ben Whishaw) has
given her tenuous security and a cherished
child. Life is about working hard and
knowing her place. But Maud’s curiosity
is piqued by an activist co-worker
(Anne-Marie Duff ) and the rebellious
wife (Romola Garai) of an antipathetic
politician (Samuel West). Clandestine
meetings with a local militant (Helena
Bonham Carter) are monitored by the
Man From The Met (Brendan Gleeson)
and Maud is dangerously committed to
an underground cell an illegal course
of action and a horrifi c ordeal.
Aptly iconic Meryl Streep cameos
as charismatic Emmeline Pankhurst
emerging from hiding to incite her
admiring troops to rebellion. But even
in this scene it is Mulligan’s radiant face
that gets to the heart of the matter
despair ignited into hope and aspiration.
Director Sarah Gavron is impressively
capable with both the character drama
and big tense set-pieces like the violently
disrupted demonstrations the militants’
“terrorist” acts and the climactic Epsom
Derby where a fateful statement marks
a landmark moment in the movement.
But what strikes one most forcibly is how
grievances indignities and the desperate
desire to be heard must eventually be
addressed by a society. AE

VERDICT A wonderfully involving moving
Carey Mulligan and the spirited ensemble
around her fl esh out a handsomely
crafted timely look at why and how far
people are willing to go for a cause.

Carey Mulligan’s
downtrodden
Maud toils for
a fairer society.

The Nightmare
★★★
OUT OCTOBER 9 / CERT. 15 / 87 MINS.
DIRECTOR Rodney Ascher CAST Yatoya
Toy Nicole Bosworth Siegfried Peters


➞ Ascher’s follow-up to the brilliantly
bizarre Room 237 is an exploration of
‘sleep paralysis’ a condition in which
sufferers are trapped between sleep
and wakefulness experiencing terrifying
visual and aural hallucinations. Eight
sufferers are interviewed on camera
while Ascher brings their experiences
to life in a way that could conceivably
induce nightmares in casual viewers
— although the potency of these
scenes is ultimately diminished by
repetition. Equally problematic is
Ascher’s determination to explore the
phenomenon empirically rather than
scientifi cally: at no point is a white-
coated polysomnographist wheeled out
to talk about the possible causes. DH


We’ll Never Have Paris
★★
OUT OCTOBER 9 / CERT. TBC / 92 MINS.
DIRECTORS Simon Helberg Jocelyn
Towne CAST Simon Helberg Melanie
Lynskey Maggie Grace


➞ Enjoyable support from Alfred
Molina (matter-of-fact dad) and Zachary
Quinto (hippie best friend) can’t quite
save this semi-fi ctionalised account
of the two directors’ complicated
courting process. The plot: co-director/
star Simon Helberg (Howard from The
Big Bang Theory) travels to the City Of
Love™ to win back ‘the one’ played
by Melanie Lynskey. The problem: the
nebbishness is spot on but it lacks
vintage Woody Allen’s charm and
humour with our hero’s bastardly
actions just making him look like a
bastard leaving it impossible to root
for him when he does blunder his
way into a happy-ever-after. AP

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