Festival
The Portrait of a Lady
(Period drama--Color -- British-U.S.)
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Isabel Archer - Nicole Kidman
Gilbert Osmond - John Malkovich
Madame Serena Merle - Barbara Hershey
Henrietta Stackpole - Mary-Louise Parker
Ralph Touchett - Martin Donovan
Mrs. Touchett - Shelley Winters
Lord Warburton - Richard E. Grant
Countess Gemini - Shelley Duvall
Edward Rosier - Christian Bale
Caspar Goodwood - Viggo Mortensen
Pansy Osmond - Valentina Cervi
Mr. Touchett - John Gielgud
Especially during the first reels, one is aware of a fiercely focused and disciplined director bringing her will to bear upon a formidable piece of material. In fact, the initial section of the story, during which the beautiful, 23-year-old heroine more or less rejects the idea of marriage out of hand and acquires a vast fortune that allows her to live as she likes, establishes a clear connection with Campion's previous headstrong, independent leading ladies.
Thematically, the director would appear to be on familiar turf, even if the specific terrain is quite new. But when Isabel Archer (Nicole Kidman) places herself in a cage through her marriage to a manipulative, spirit-sapping husband in Italy, her life, as well as the film, loses some definition and clarity of intent.
Wrap-up comes off as far too fuzzy and inconclusive in light of the intellectual surety with which pic begins, leaving the viewer vaguely perplexed by the story's arc and ultimate point. Still, most obscure scene may be the opening one, which suggests a more radical interpretive film than the one that follows.
Over black-and-white images of contemporary 20 ish girls frolicking together with a sort of flower-child abandon, an Australian woman's voice intones about the challenge of finding the right mate, someone who can be like a mirror to oneself. Any hope that this sequence will relate to anything else in the picture, or will be resolved by a companion bookend, is to remain frustrated. But Campion then bursts through to the core of her concerns, as Isabel, in an admirably edgy scene, turns down the marriage proposal of Lord Warburton (Richard E. Grant). "I shall probably never marry,"' she speculates, adding that she views marriage as a barrier to life's other opportunities.
Left parentless in Albany, N.Y., Isabel is staying at Gardencourt, the splendid estate of her aunt, Mrs. Touchett (a subdued Shelley Winters) and the latter's aged husband (John Gielgud). While the early scenes are necessarily devoted to introducing these and other characters, including Isabel's consumptive cousin Ralph Touchett (Martin Donovan) and the overweening Henrietta Stackpole (Mary-Louise Parker, pushing it), the attention of the director and screenwriter Laura Jones (who adapted "An Angel at My Table" for Campion) never strays far from reasserting Isabel's insistence upon exploring life's possibilities to the fullest.
Campion's highly concentrated, poetic style sometimes catches the viewer off-guard, notably in Gielgud's memorable death scene, which consists of a final mighty yawn, shown in great closeup. Also commanding is the introduction of a pivotal figure in Isabel's life, Madame Serena Merle (Barbara Hershey), a sophisticated middle-aged beauty whom Isabel takes to be the Complete Woman. But it is this unattached woman of the world who, paradoxically, leads Isabel into a trap of domestic oppression the young American had so intently vowed to avoid.
In Italy, Isabel becomes intrigued by Madame Merle's friend, the affected American dilettante Gilbert Osmond (John Malkovich), a lazy artist who lives in dusky museum-like splendor. Pic then jumps right over what would seem to be the most dramatically loaded events in Isabel's life the erosion of her will to independence, her decision to marry, her presumed introduction to sex by Osmond, the death of a baby boy at age 1 to pick up the couple's life in Rome three years later.
Already, Isabel has become an icy matron, at odds with her husband over the latter's desire to thwart the courtship between Osmond's teenage daughter, Pansy (a very fine Valentina Cervi), and a good-looking young Englishman (a purposeful Christian Bale). This sideline intrigue proves moderately interesting in its own right, but the focus gradually returns to the deadening effect that the cruelly domineering Osmond has had on Madame Merle, Isabel and, potentially, his daughter, and to the question of how Isabel might escape and save herself. Eventually, she finds a way out, but the solution seems tentative and quite equivocal.
Campion presents the story in a dark, lush, mysterious manner, using a style that perhaps relies overly upon closeups and occasionally indulges in the exoticism of the foreign for its own sake. A couple of dream/fantasy sequences are startlingly good: one in which Isabel imagines herself surrounded by her three suitors on a bed, and an even more inventive one that recounts, in mock-silent documentary style, her continuing preoccupation with Osmond during the course of long international travels.
Kidman is everything one could ask as Isabel bright, alert, optimistic, very much alive and conquerable only by the time-tested wiles of Old Europe. Malkovich's quirks and hard-to-read behavior work well for the deceptive Osmond, while Hershey is excellent in her early scenes in which Madame Merle is meant to represent woman at her best, but a tad less credible when she is brought low in the late going. Donovan seems a bit soft at first as Isabel's sickly, admiring cousin, but his performance ultimately comes from behind to pay off. Grant is effective as the highly eligible bachelor who courts both Isabel and her daughter-in-law, while Viggo Mortensen's eager courtier proves a bit overbearingly earnest.
Physically, the film is ravishing, with Stuart Dryburgh's resplendent lensing taking full advantage of the carefully chosen British and Italian locations and showing off the lush beauty of Janet Patterson's production and costume designs. Wojiech Kilar's classically pitched score is supplemented by numerous well-known selections by Schubert and Strauss, and pic holds the interest throughout the nearly 2-hour running time. Still, this is a film that appeals to the head far more than to the heart, making for a portrait that seems somewhat less than complete.
Camera (Technicolor, Panavision widescreen), Stuart Dryburgh; editor, Veronika Jenet; music, Wojiech Kilar; production and costume design, Janet Patterson; supervising art director, Martin Childs; art direction, Mark Raggett; supervising set decorator, Jill Quertier; sound (Dolby), Peter Glossop; sound design, Lee Smith; associate producer-assistant director, Mark Turnbull; second unit director, Colin Englert; casting, Johanna Ray and Associates. Reviewed at Culver Studios, Culver City, Sept. 3, 1996. (In Venice Film Festival noncompeting.) Running time: 144 min.
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