| Preserving the soul of Les Miserables
 By Ervell E Menezes
 THE New Year has not been very
        special with regard to foreign films. They just
        dont seem to click. Whether it is the tight market
        situation or the festival season (folks spending money on
        other things) or the lukewarm content of the films, it is
        hard to say. Antz. though released last year, was
        expected to have a good run in the New Year, but it
        didnt. Dance With Me. that Vanessa Williams
        musical was also a non-starter. Billie Augusts Les
        Miserables that Victor Hugo classic often times made
        into a film, is not likely to set the Seine (or for that
        matter the Ganga) aflame but Im happy August
        didnt choose to do with the story what Alfonso
        Cuaron did with Great Expectations  ruined
        it. Admittedly, it isnt to recreate those classics,
        which run into generations, but even though August from
        time to time lets the film slip out of grasp (only for
        brief moments) he is able to preserve the soul of Victor
        Hugos novel. Should a condemned man be
        given a second chance? Will he turn a new leaf? Valjean
        (Liam Neeson), the hero of Les Miserables is put
        into prison for 20 years for robbing food so his being
        born poor is his only crime. But stealing has become
        second nature to him, so much so when the Bishop (Peter
        Vaughn) offers him supper and a bed to sleep in, he
        reciprocates by stealing his silver cutlery. But when the police bring
        back Valjean to the Bishop he tells them that hes
        given him the cutlery. Whats more he adds the
        silver candlesticks to his loot. "With this silver I
        bought your soul...and now I give you back to God."
        Hard to believe such acts in todays corrupt world,
        within the clergy or without, but that is the focal point
        of the film. It is an act which completely transforms
        Valjean who because of his goodness is made mayor of
        Vigau. But the reform man just cannot escape the wrath of
        former Inspector Javert (Geoffrey Rush) who identifies
        him and wants to bring him to book. Astutely condensed by
        scriptwriter Rafael Yglesias and handsomely mounted by
        director Billie August, the 19th century ambience is
        brilliantly recaptured. It is only the vast canvas that
        is at times detrimental to the pace of the film. The
        morality aspect, so strong in those distant times, is
        also graphically recreated. So is the dire poverty.
        Valjean rescues a woman of ill-repute and pledges to
        bring up her illegitimate daughter Cossette (Claire
        Danes) after her death. It is Cossettes romance
        with a Parisian revolutionary Marius (Hans Matheson) that
        is rushed through. Still, all things
        considered, The Miserables (English translation)
        is an above-average film with Liam Neeson showing that he
        is now (after Michael Collins and Rob
        Roy) in the mould of a top billing actor and he is
        well supported by Geoffrey Rush who makes himself quite
        despicable as the villain. Uma Thurman is wasted as
        Fanine while Claire Danes continues to impress as
        Cossette. Peter Vaughns cameo as the all-forgiving
        Bishop is a stand-out, even if the film isnt. Set in Paris too is Madeline,
        a childrens film centred on an orphaned girl
        (Hatty Jones) and her escapades in a boarding school for
        girls. Using elements from four of Ludwigs
        Bemelmans illustrated books about this plucky
        heroine Madeline there is enough of incidents to keep the
        viewer absorbed (if not engrossed) as the boarders with
        the aid of nun-headmistress Miss Clavel (Frances
        McDormand) thwart the designs of Lord Covington (Nigel
        Hawthorne) who is bent on closing down the school. May be it is predictable
        but a good plot and a climax worth waiting for round of
        the rather sweet story rather convincingly. Theres
        slapstick and doses of humour plus some cute lines voiced
        by those precocious pre-teens. Frances McDormand who won
        the Best Actress Oscar for Fargo a couple of years
        ago, shows why she won it by an impressive performance. Soul Food is a cute
        film about blacks which Twentieth Century-Fox didnt
        even import because they felt it wouldnt do well,
        commercially. It was released on Star TV. Directed by
        George Tillman Jr it is a warm story which gives one an
        insight into the family ties of the blacks. Related by a
        grandson Ahmed in the household, it captures the sea-saw
        struggle between three daughters when the matriarch
        Mother Joe falls ill and the family is falling apart. Teri (Vanessa Williams) is
        a lawyer and decision-maker because she earns the most.
        Maxine (Nia Long), is a homemaker and Bird (Viveka A.
        Fox), a struggling owner of a hair salon. Their husbands,
        one of whom is an ex-convict, with their problems
        dont make things easier. But it is the Sunday
        afternoon dinners which sort of unites them. Based on the
        George Tillmans experiences it is a well-crafted
        film. Raw, yet human, tough yet caring and strikes yet
        another blow for black cinema. In the best tradition of
        Spike Lee and John Singleton. Catch it on TV.  
 This
        feature was published on February 14, 1999
 
 
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