Brideshead revisited
Oct. 6th, 2008 01:17 pmOn Friday evening, sonic and I went to see Brideshead Revisited. Writing Evelyn Waugh so it has the right mix between humour and tragedy is always really difficult, even for, you know, Evelyn Waugh. Who's read Brideshead Revisited? I'd read a couple of other Waugh, but not that one.
The first third
The first third was really enjoyable. There is humour with astounding finesse; nothing that could be construed specifically as a joke, yet with the right turn of phrase or brief pause has the whole cinema giggling.
The last two-thirds
The last two-thirds were rather more top-heavy than I'd normally want to see on a Friday night. Although I think I was fortunate to be just at a point where I did appreciate the questions raised; Charles' love-hate relationship with Brideshead, and the Brideshead family's love-hate relationship with Catholicism, and that Charles has up to three epic romances in his twenties, chewing up Brideshead as much as it chews him up, and only when he's got to about thirty does he start to see it all in perspective, which is the end of the film.
Did I mention, it did flashbacks well, mainly by having a snippet at the start, and then replaying most of it at the appropriate point. This seems to work very well, since the difference between what you knew the first time, and what you know the second time, points up all of the important things.
The first third
The first third was really enjoyable. There is humour with astounding finesse; nothing that could be construed specifically as a joke, yet with the right turn of phrase or brief pause has the whole cinema giggling.
The last two-thirds
The last two-thirds were rather more top-heavy than I'd normally want to see on a Friday night. Although I think I was fortunate to be just at a point where I did appreciate the questions raised; Charles' love-hate relationship with Brideshead, and the Brideshead family's love-hate relationship with Catholicism, and that Charles has up to three epic romances in his twenties, chewing up Brideshead as much as it chews him up, and only when he's got to about thirty does he start to see it all in perspective, which is the end of the film.
Did I mention, it did flashbacks well, mainly by having a snippet at the start, and then replaying most of it at the appropriate point. This seems to work very well, since the difference between what you knew the first time, and what you know the second time, points up all of the important things.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-06 03:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-06 11:57 pm (UTC):) Yeah. I commented to Sonic about the duality of the film that I hadn't read the book, but from what else I'd read, I'd bet large amounts of money that it was inspired directly from it, not any sort of artefact of the adaption :)
On the other hand, I have to wonder, is it _actually_ like that, or in ten years time would I see the second half as ironically witty as I see the first half now, but don't think think I would have done ten years ago? I suspect not, but I can't know for sure.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-06 11:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-07 12:50 pm (UTC)Quism since sent this review to me, and now I'm not sure whether I want to see it or not now. Would you recommend it on its merits, separate from the book?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/sep/27/evelynwaugh.fiction
no subject
Date: 2008-10-11 02:58 pm (UTC)I'd recommend it to someone who liked that sort of thing, but wasn't aware of brideshead. But it's not like films that just do something completely different to the premise of the original, and you can just pretend they're unrelated; whether you think it's how waugh ought to be or a travesty, I think it's definitely colouring your impression of that book.
(They're right that the Catholicism is portrayed very cuttingly. I very much sympathised with all of the Catholic characters, but if you haven't read the book, the message did look like it was supposed to be "religion fucks you up". I hope that's because the original portrayal is sufficiently human you can see it in different ways, but I don't know how someone who liked the book would see it.)
(Do you two want to come by for the party tonight? :))
no subject
Date: 2008-10-14 08:00 am (UTC)I definately will watch Brideshead at some point - I'm not such a Waugh purist that I'll point out, or notice, all the changes from the book. It would be hard not to compare it to the BBC version though - that was brilliant.