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Savage Grace (2007)
Director: Tom Kalin
Movie review
From Time Out London
There are two bathtub scenes in ‘Savage Grace’. In the first, the beautiful, charismatic, unstable social climber Barbara Baekeland (Julianne Moore) sits with her pubescent son, Tony, as she drips indiscretions; in the second, the twentysomething Tony (Eddie Redmayne), sensuous and fragile, washes Barabara and tends the self-inflicted wounds on her wrists. Their intense and intensely wrong relationship would become a real-life scandal when Tony, heir to the Bakelite plastics fortune, turned on the mother with whom, by then, he was having sex.Tom Kalin’s second feature – like his first, 1992’s ‘Swoon’ – is a tragedy of sexual and social compulsiveness in which catastrophe grows from narcissism, alienation and a very odd idea of fun and games. Focusing on six episodes between 1946, when Tony was born, and 1972, when Barbara died, Kalin and writer Howard A Rodman (adapting Natalie Robins and Steven
M L Aronson’s book) anatomise the perils of unearned wealth and unacknowledged consequences, following their idle, rich protagonists – including Tony’s chilly father Brooks (Stephen Dillane) – from New York to Paris, Cadaques to London, a languid caravan of lost souls.
The film is gorgeously designed, photographed and costumed, and offers febrile, conflicted performances that keep the Baekelands at arm’s length from the audience and, emotionally if not physically, each other – an effect bolstered by neglecting to age the characters visually as the decades and countries pass. The approach risks excluding us from this ornate tinderbox altogether, but it’s an effective expression of the family’s cloistered, retarded existence. If Norman Bates had taken his mother on vacation, it might have played out like this.
Author: Ben Walters
Time Out London Issue 1977, July 10 -16, 2008
User reviews of this film
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- Dom B said...
- Posted on Dec 04 2009 04:11 Asteroid is clearly an idiot. Perhaps the subject matter hit too close to home... "a subject not suitable for film". If art holds the mirror up to nature, nothing in human experience can, or should be, avoided in film. Given this is a true story, and brilliantly done, makes that comment even more laughable. Futher viewing for Asteroid: The Manchurian Candidate, Chinatown, Close My Eyes, Lone Star, Oldboy, The War Zone, The Cider House Rules, The Dreamers, Volver. Spot the theme.
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- Asteroid said...
- Posted on Nov 26 2008 14:22 This was a tasteless and revolting film. I would not recommend it to anyone. The subject matter (incest) is not suitable for film. Avoid.
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- Ricardo said...
- Posted on Jul 17 2008 19:06 Visconti's mood in this shocking story with Moore as effective and great as usual.
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Cast & crew
Director: Tom Kalin
Cast: Julianne Moore, Stephen Dillane, Eddie Redmayne, Elena Anaya, Hugh Dancy, Anne Reid, Belén Rueda full cast
Rated: 15
Duration: 89 mins
UK Release: Jul 11 2008
US Release: May 23 2008
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