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Enduring Love (2004)

Director: Roger Michell

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From Time Out London

I first watched this adaptation of Ian McEwan’s fine novel immediately after finishing the original book. With his tricky, first-person narrative still on my mind, the viewing highlighted a frequent pitfall of seeing any film based on a well-known work of literature: it can turn a trip to the movies into an unhappy game of Spot the Difference. Thankfully, Michell (‘Notting Hill’, ‘The Mother’) and screenwriter Joe Penhall (‘Some Voices’) have crafted a film that is both a sensitive adaptation and, on its own merit, a powerful study of the aftermath of a sudden, unexpected trauma on a previously stable, loving relationship between two young, intelligent Londoners.

The opening scene of this smart thriller comes across like a rusty knife ripping through young skin. On a perfect summer’s day, Joe (Daniel Craig) and Claire (Samantha Morton) are sitting in an empty field; a marriage proposal is on the tip of Joe’s tongue, a champagne bottle in his grip. Then, from the heavens, there glides a bright red plot catalyst: a struggling hot air balloon that will disrupt the easy lives of this university lecturer and his sculptor girlfriend for months to come. In the ensuing attempt to steady this floating mass, Joe witnesses a stranger – another Good Samaritan – being pulled up into the air by the balloon’s rope and plunge to his death in a nearby field. The calamity leaves Joe with two unwanted gifts: a persistent, unhinged stalker, Jed (Rhys Ifans), and escalating feelings of paranoia and self-doubt that throw his life into turmoil.

On one level, this is a simple yet enticing tale of a desperate stalker and his prey (an aspect that climaxes a little weakly). Yet the film is more interesting when cataloguing the disintegration of Joe’s charmed life. Set in a cosy corner of middle-class north London (Bill Nighy plays the best mate), this pitches emotion against reason, evolution against love, family against loneliness. It’s superbly well-crafted, and the script, especially, is a joy, again confirming Penhall as one of our leading writing talents, for both film and theatre.

Author: DC

Time Out London Issue 1788: November 24-December 01, 2004


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