Genre: Drama/Sci-Fi/Romance
Director: Robert Schwentke
Cast: Eric Bana, Rachel McAdams, Ron Livingston,
Jane McLean, Stephen Tobolowsky, Arliss Howard
RunTime: 1 hr 50 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: PG (Some Nudity)
Official Website: http://www.thetimetravelerswife.com/
Opening
Day: 3 September 2009
Synopsis:
This
is the remarkable story of Henry DeTamble, a dashing, adventurous
librarian who travels involuntarily through time, and Clare
Abshire, an artist whose life takes a natural sequential course.
Henry and Clare's passionate love affair endures across a
sea of time and captures the two lovers in an impossibly romantic
trap.
Movie Review:
Time
travel doesn’t always make sense when you start thinking
about its logic. The same too can be said about love- after
all, why do we keep searching for something that we know will
probably bring us hurt and heartbreak as well? But both time
travel and love also have a wildly seductive quality about
them; and even though we know that they aren’t always
logical, we find ourselves drawn from time to time towards
them, attracted by their possibilities.
Audrey
Niffenegger’s bestseller “The Time Traveler’s
Wife” flirts with both these possibilities in a story
that spans some of life’s most significant moments-
growing up as a teenager, falling in love for the first time,
getting married, having children and finally, death. Bruce
Joel Rubin’s (“Ghost, “Stuart Little”)
screenplay focuses on the latter three events- the brief romance
between Clare Abshire (Rachel McAdams) and Henry DeTamble
(Eric Bana) leading up to their marriage, their subsequent
family life and that inevitable conclusion we all anticipate
with dread.
Readers
of the book will no doubt lament the excision of Clare’s
teenage romance with Henry, for it is this period of adolescence
and the events within that led to Clare’s deep unwavering
love for a man she has not met. Indeed, some viewers may find
it strange why Clare has so resolutely, and perhaps foolishly,
made up her mind that the guy she meets in the meadow as a
young girl is the one.
For
the uninitiated, Henry is a time-traveler due to a genetic
anomaly known as “chrono-impairment” and his older
self travels back in time to tell Clare that they meet, fall
in love and get married in the future. It’s no small
feat adapting a book that goes backwards and forwards and
then backwards again- credit must go to Bruce Joel Rubin and
director Robert Schwentke for establishing enough consistency
and logic from an essentially fractured narrative.
Where
this film truly excels is its fleshing out of some of the
book’s most poignant themes. In telling Clare that they
will fall in love and get married, has Henry already robbed
Clare of her own volition of choosing her life partner? Indeed,
are the choices we make really based on our own free will
or have they already been predetermined? In our own ways,
each of us has come to realize we aren’t always in control
of what happens around us- which also begs the question of
whether we are better off knowing what’s in store, even
if we aren’t able to change one bit of it.
And
this becomes even more pertinent when it comes to the subject
of love. Is it easier if we know who it is that will be our
one true love? Is it better if we know when it is our loved
ones have to leave us so we can prepare for that eventuality?
Yes, Robert Schwentke’s film gracefully evokes these
ambiguities inherent in Audrey Niffenegger’s fantasy
tale, ambiguities just as significant and real in our own
lives.
Romanticists
can however rest easy- these profundities in no way diminish
the touching and affecting tale of two people whose relationship
is both blessed and cursed by a condition they cannot control
or comprehend. Particularly moving to this reviewer is the
film’s final scene, which gives new meaning to the eternality
of true love, despite the mortality of our beings.
In
their respective roles, Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams both
shine through their earnest performances. Bana captures nicely
the weariness and helplessness of a man who cannot choose
where he wants to be- especially when it is with his one true
love- and a person whose very presence is transient. The very
stunning McAdams is also wonderfully expressive with her beautiful
smile and heartbreaking frown, and together Bana and McAdams
simply light up the screen.
There
is a quote that says “without leaps of imagination,
or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities”.
Perhaps time travel, or for that matter finding true love,
is simply a figment of imagination or the stuff of dreams
to some. But “The Time Traveler’s Wife”
is a beautiful tale that opens our mind to imagine and dream,
for it is in doing so that we are open to the excitement of
love’s possibilities. And thanks to a well-crafted movie,
as well as some luminous performances, the possibility of
both isn’t that far-fetched. The least it will do is
dare you to imagine.
Movie Rating:
(If you open your heart, and your mind, you will find
this a beautifully told story of love and other possibilities)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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