Genre: Drama
Director: Mike Newell
Cast: Javier Bardem, Benjamin Bratt, Giovanna
Mezzogiorno, Liev Schreiber, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Hector
Elizondo, Fernanda Motenegro, Laura Harring, John Leguizamo
RunTime: 2 hrs 18 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: M18 (Sexual Scenes)
Official Website: www.loveinthetime.com
Opening Day: 10 January 2008
OUR
REVIEW OF "LOVE IN THE TIME OF CHOLERA" SOUDNTRACK
Synopsis:
Based on the acclaimed book by the Nobel Prize-winning author
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, adapted for the screen by Academy
Award winner Ronald Harwood (The Pianist). This is the epic
love story of a man who waits fifty years for the love of
his life amid the lush, romantic backdrop of early 20th century
South America. Music by Shakira.
Movie Review:
Director Mike Newell continues his hit-and-miss streak with
“Love in the Time of Cholera”, a disdainful story
of love (as opposed to unfairly labeling it a love story)
that befuddles grandiosity with spectacle, intimations with
clunk and contemplation with melodrama. But much of the blame
surely lies at the feet of Ronald Harwood, who won an Oscar
for his adaptation of “The Pianist”. The same
precision of skill never appears here in his interpretation
of the best-selling novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. It travails
the same missteps as “Silk”, another successful
novel that blundered its adaptation amidst the stunning visual
faculties of its place and time. Both dealt with the densely
layered realities of longing and the quandary of faithfulness
but its films failed miserably in evincing the intangibilities
of such complexities.
No
amount of intensely lovelorn gazes, lush cinematography and
melancholic score and can mask the frostiness at the core
of the film, precisely detached from the epic sweep and intimacy
of Marquez’s prose. Perhaps this notion of love might
be something so far flung from my own understanding of it
but there’s very little romance to be found in Newell’s
abortion, other than the sort of love a narcissist might feel
about his idea of “love” when it’s all boiled
down to a sudsy sentimentality, undermining its truest essence
of devotion by ennobling the actions of a libertine caught
up in an instance of callous and unprepossessing obsession
rather than one driven by a furious passion.
Florentino
Ariza (Javier Bardem) must be the smartest fool in love. Spurned
as a young man in 1879 by the ravishing Fermina Daza (Giovanna
Mezzogiorno) for a successful doctor (Benjamin Bratt), the
young man spends the rest of his days harbouring his maiden
crush while embarking on a crusade to bed as many women as
he possibly can during the next 50 years till he can finally
claim her. Marquez understood the disconnect between the flesh
and soul, using very little dialogue and a gentle, knowing
narration to imaginatively convey the state of mind in Florentino’s
decision to immerse himself in carnal wanderlust while retaining
the burning desire of love scorned that elucidates both the
cerebral behind his motivations as well as pathos behind his
obsession. Harwood’s translation of Marquez’s
florid style poses relatively understandable complications,
except for the crucial mishandling that ends up completely
excising its grace and gutting it of its profundity.
Despite
its massive failings, at the very least the film isn’t
thoroughly stodgy. Approaching the sort of artistic camp that
very few films actually manage to reach (most if not all unwittingly),
“Love in the Time of Cholera” points to the kitschy
idea of placid romances in pulp novellas instead of a testament
for undying love that marked the philosophy of its material.
Movie
Rating:
(Fails to be engaging, devoid of passion and soul)
Review by Justin Deimen
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