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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
EVENING (LAJOS KOLTAI)
There are movies that make you laugh, those that
make you think, and others that affect you in
an emotional way long after the credits have run
their course.
"Evening" does all of the above and
more.
Within the gorgeous setting of the east coast
ocean town of Newport, Rhode Island, Ann
Lord (Vanessa Redgrave) is standing high
and mighty at the crest of the cliff in a white
gown and even whiter hair, as the younger, 20-something
version of herself (Claire Danes) is below, drifting
along in a sail boat. Ann is at the end of her
life, floating between her present and her past,
to come to some conclusions about the life she’s
led.
In a disillusioned and delirious state, her mind
travels back to a time 50 years ago when she discovered
a love that would haunt her the rest of her life,
a love that was not to be, but one that would
never leave her. We see what took place that weekend
when she visited the high-society home and family
of her best friend, Lila Wittenborn
(Mamie Gummer), who was reluctantly getting married.
It’s as if she is really there again, meeting
the young doctor Harris Arden
(Patrick Wilson) for the first time, the son of
the the former housekeeper who grew up with the
Wittenborn family.
From her bed Ann calls his name, repeating things
that she once said, much to the confusion of her
daughters Constance (Natasha
Richardson) and Nina (Toni Collette),
who are at her bedside. The two discover they
don't know everything about their mother, including
the existance of a secret love named Harris.
Having been born from two different fathers from
two failed marriages is just one way in which
the two sisters have formed a wedge between each
other. Constance has the husband, the career and
kids, while Nina is fearful of committing to anyone
or anything. Even in experiences they both shared,
including the time their mother took them to see
Peggy Lee, they each interpreted that experience
differently.
But both are grasping at one last chance to have
their mother back, if only for a moment. Constance
seeks to bond with her dying mom on the difficulties
of motherhood, while Nina tries, between occasions
where her mother is conscious, to know more about
this lost love so that she can somehow find that
same kind of love.
Evening presents the concept of death and the
reflection of life in a unique, simple and poignant
way, made possible not only by the direction of
Lajos Koltai and the screenwriting
skills of Susan Mino and Michael
Cunningham (The Hours), but by their
amazing, star laden cast.
You’ve got some of best actresses of our
time, along with their real life daughters. Meryl
Streep appears at Ann’s deathbed as the
aged Lila, while her daughter Mamie plays Lila
as a young woman. Vanessa Redgrave, who seems
to be busier than ever on Broadway and on the
silver screen, is accompanied by her daughter
Natasha Richardson.
When you throw in Toni Collete, Glenn Close,
who plays Lila’s high society mother, and
Claire Danes, you’ve got all the makings
of a shoe-in for the Oscars.
It would be easy to categorize "Evening"
as a chick-flick, and I’ll admit that a
number of mother-daughter scenes (especially at
the end of the film) made me wish I had brought
a box of Kleenex. But pretty much anyone can walk
away from the film with some level of optimistic
insight gained through Ann’s experiences.
Even though she never got to be with the man she
loved, had failed marriages and singing career,
and regrets about how she raised her daughters,
she learned that in the end--there are no mistakes.
www.focusfeatures.com/evening
-Kim Owens, June 29, 2007
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