Genre: Drama/Romance
Director: François Girard
Cast: Keira Knightley, Michael Pitt, Koji Yakusho,
Alfred Molina, Mark Rendall, Seri Ashina
RunTime:
1 hr 50 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: M18
Official Website: www.silkmovie.com
Opening Day: 15 November 2007
Synopsis:
Based
on the Alessandro Baricco's novel this is the story of a married
silkworm smuggler, Herve Joncour, in 19th Century France who
travels to Japan to collect his clandestine cargo. While there
he spots a beautiful European woman, the concubine of a local
baron, with whom he becomes obsessed. Without speaking the
same language, they communicate through letters until war
intervenes. Their unrequited love persists however, and Herve's
wife Helene begins to suspect.
Movie Review:
The treacly charms of romance or the misery of longing can
be a subjective experience. When it is executed with its heart
in the right place, the genre can become a wondrous thing
for any viewer, the aching moods and complex emotions it augurs
start and continue to change the way we perceive films. Unfortunately
for Francois Girard, his lofty follow-up to 1998’s “The
Red Violin” doesn’t come close at all.
While
“Silk” is stunningly beautiful, it is also stunningly
dull. Ostensibly the love story beyond borders, the film is
overly ripe and more reliant on the sweeping idea of romance
to validate its scenes across the tides of its stoic languor
and oppressive superficiality. The campy high-culture attempted
(and perhaps even perfected at times) by Girard becomes almost
a parody once the film makes a conscious decision to put the
onus of feeling on the film’s lush cinematography (by
cinematographer Alain Dostie, it has to be mentioned) and
pervasive score. It becomes meaningless by its end, an unwieldy
and unemotional piece that never once approaches what it intends
to convey.
Based
on Italian novelist Alessandro Baricco’s best-selling
novel, “Silk,” tells a story of brewing obsession
in a 19th century French trader. Joncour (Michael Pitt) seeks
an escape from a career in the military and an opportunity
to wed his beloved Helene (Keira Knightley) by accepting a
textile entrepreneur’s offer of travelling to the “end
of the word” – Japan in this case – to acquire
uncontaminated silkworm eggs for a considerable fee. Journeying
into the unknown, the interior of Japan’s snowy villages,
he completes his transaction but encounters complication in
his infatuation with a warlord Jubei’s (Koji Yakusho)
mysterious concubine (Sei Ashina).
Inconsequential
is a term that can be shared by both Girard’s soulless
translation and his Pitt’s anaemic performance that’s
as passive and unengaging as it gets. There’s a suffocating
exterior to the film’s condescension to present beauty
as a substitute for affected sentiment that interprets into
a self-negating interest in its characters.
Girard
canvasses the usual sentiments and practical conundrums that
result from a cross-cultural love affair, with the geography
of the land looking sumptuous in a film as frosty as its icy
hills. He falls into similarly banal trappings of not recognising
the lines between eroticism and exoticism of Asian sensuality
and this misplaced fascinated with the Orient is represented
in Joncour’s ardent and illicit desire to experience
the thrill of the unknown but unwilling to compromise the
familiarity of home. The courtly subservience of the concubine’s
femininity is the fibre to Girard’s weightless fabric
of vain pageantry, becoming as enthralled with the fanciful
brocades as Joncour is struck by his lust for the girl wearing
them.
Movie Rating:
(Stupendously gorgeous, yet dull and inelegant)
Review by Justin Deimen
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