By James Bowman on 1.22.07 @ 12:02AM
Rather too busy, but Miss Zellweger is luminous.
"Life is just one damned thing after another," said Elbert
Hubbard, the early 20th century bellettrist and author of the
once-famous "Message to Garcia." He must have reflected ruefully on
his own wisdom as he went down on that notoriously damned thing,
the ocean liner Lusitania, sunk by a German U-Boat when he
was on his way to Europe to try to make peace in the middle of
World War I. But he was also right in the sense that this
relentless eventfulness is the primary way in which life differs
from art, which demands a certain economy with events in order that
they may be given some shape and thematic unity -- things that are
sometimes a bit hard to come by in biopics like the charming
Miss Potter. Directed by Chris Noonan from a screenplay by
Richard Maltby Jr., the film tends to come up short in the shaping
and unity department and so to seem, like life itself, just one
damned thing after another.
True, on the plus side, this disjointedness is redolent of
reality, but watching it on the big screen can be fatiguing.
Fortunately Messrs. Noonan and Maltby have the luminous Renee
Zellweger to work with in the principal role and, to my admittedly
admiring eye, this makes up for an awful lot. They also have going
for them the near-universal popularity of her character, Beatrix
Potter, whose exquisitely illustrated little square volumes dealing
with the adventures of Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny Mrs.
Tiggy-winkle and the naughty Squirrel Nutkin and so many more are
fondly remembered remnants of childhood for so many. Yet there is
little in the movie about these characters or their creation apart
from the fact that, as we already know, many people admire
them.
The other problem you may have when making a film about real
people is that it's harder to avoid cliche. Miss Potter's battle
against her parents' class prejudice in order to marry the man she
loved, as shown in the film, suffers from the double whammy of
being both much too familiar as a theme of old-fashioned books and
at the same time virtually incomprehensible to today's audiences,
since the man, her publisher Norman Warne (Ewan McGregor), is from
virtually the same social class as she is -- as she indignantly
points out to her parents. That the big difficulty, so far as they
are concerned, is that he is "in trade" while they are
professionals with inherited wealth must be particularly baffling
to Americans.
Yet in spite of this, the human attachment of these two shy and
rather nerdy Britons of a century ago still has an emotional punch
to it. At least part of the reason is the film's success at
imaginatively re-creating the moral world -- as well as, to my eye
and barring the pollution, the physical world -- of Edwardian
England. It's not just that social class is openly and immensely
important to people. That's an inert datum because it answers to
nothing in most of us today. It's rather that the idea of romantic
love -- which we still have in theory but which sexual freedom has
robbed of much of its imaginative power -- is brought almost
shockingly to life again in this respectful re-creation of life
before the sexual revolution.
Or, I should say, the first sexual revolution: the one
that took place in the 1920s and foreshadowed the much more
sweeping and lasting one of the 1960s. When love comes after so
much shyness and repression and parental thwarting, it takes on a
force that we seldom see these days -- a force naturally increased
by its subsequent encounter with tragedy. Yet the very strength of
that narrative arc makes such other and characteristically biopic
elements as Beatrix's imaginative world as revealed in her books or
her efforts with the money they generate to preserve the wild and
rustic character of the Lake District look almost like
irrelevancies. What are they doing here? Oh, right. They really
happened.
Well, other things happened too -- things of which the movie
makes no mention. Particularly conspicuous by its absence is any
mention of Miss Potter's shrewdness as a businesswoman, as shown in
her pioneering efforts to transform the popularity of her creations
into profitable toys, knick-knacks, gewgaws and household goods
long before Disney and others thought they were inventing the
merchandising of entertainment-generated brand names. I was also
dismayed by the mercifully few bits of animation, where the
familiar drawings come to life on screen as a way of showing how
alive they were to their creatrix, Beatrix. Not only do these make
the movie look, to my eye, slightly cheesy and fantastical, they
spoil the period feel that is otherwise its great virtue. Nowadays,
we may think it sweet and endearing to think talking animals are
real; at the time this would have looked like mental illness.
Most unfortunate, I think, are the film's attempts to give its
disjointed narrative a central theme in the form of that
too-familiar triumph over the patriarchy of everything small,
feminine, individualistic, personal, fantastical, artistic and
environmentally correct. The movie could have done, perhaps, with
just a little emotional distance from the heroine and her twee
world. On the other hand, there is a distance from Amelia,
"Milly," Warne (Emily Watson) an early feminist who hymns the joys
of a single woman's life -- "Men are good only for two things,
financial support and procreation" -- and eschews those two
terrors, "domestic enslavement and childbirth," until Beatrix asks
her what to do about her brother's proposal and she reveals the
romantic heart beneath her militant surface.
In spite of its shortcomings, I enjoyed the movie quite a lot.
Generally speaking, it was nicely done, offering us real-looking,
sympathetic characters, some spectacular scenery and, above all, a
sense of history as it must have been lived a century ago -- no
small achievement for any film.
topics:
Trade, Business, Environment, Books, Oil