52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 42. ME BEFORE YOU (Director: Thea Sharrock)
Directors can make stars of actresses. Thea Sharrock, who
became the theatre director of the Southwark Playhouse aged 24, fifteen years
ago, elicits a fine performance from Emilia Clarke in the British romantic
drama, Me Before You. It is a case
of ‘you before me’ as far as Sharrock is concerned, making her first feature
film – her only other screen credit is for television, The Hollow Crown – Henry V. Clarke, best known for her recurring
role as Daenerys Targaryen in Game of
Thrones, blossoms on screen before our eyes – well, the butterfly dresses
in this ace tearjerker certainly help. Incidentally, I have never written the
words ‘ace tearjerker’ before, though I might have described Marley and Me thusly: ‘Ace Tearjerker, Pet Dejected’.
Jojo Moyes has seen off two screenwriters Scott Neustadter
and Michael Weber (500 Days of Summer)
to claim sole script credit. I hope Messrs Neustadter and Weber got a thank you
note for polishing the silverware, as opposed to script polishing the Joel
Silver-ware which means inserting a few zingers. It is based on her 2012 book
which owes something to Jane Eyre,
minus the mad woman in the attic. Imagine Mr Rochester played by an actor who
was in The Hunger Games confined to
a wheelchair attended to by Sally Hawkins’ character from Happy Go Lucky in an adjunct to Pembrokeshire Castle – visitor
numbers likely to spike – and you’ll get some idea of the appeal of this film.
Heck, someone might think to cast Clarke in a new version of Jane Eyre; she’s good with romance and
fire (in that order). Note to ITV: we don’t need another adaptation just yet.
The film opens in soap powder whiteness as the handsome Will
Traynor (Sam Claflin) emerges from a glorious white duvet to the shower and
then to a suit. He must have been dazzled by all that whiteness because he
doesn’t watch where he’s going in traffic and – aieeee. Cut to two years later
and Louisa Clark (Clarke) is serving her last three customers at the Buttered
Bun. Can’t afford those cakes, well, I’ll discount them for you if you eat them
standing up – I don’t think Messrs Neustadter and Weber are familiar with
British Value Added Tax rules, hence their disappearance from the credits.
Cannot finish your sandwich, well, I’ll wrap it up for you. Lou gets her last
pay packet in a brown envelope – cash. I can’t imagine Neustadter and Weber
knowing about that either. I imagine Sharrock thought long and hard whether
international audiences would understand the concept of a P45.
Lou as she is affectionately known – and she gets less than
she gives - is the family breadwinner.
She worked at a café so there might have been spare. This represents a
calamity. At the job centre plus, she is notified of a vacancy as an assistant
to a quadriplegic, a man who has completely lost the use of his limbs.
Interviewed by the frosty Camilla Traynor (Janet McTeer) as her tight skirt
chooses an inopportune moment to rip, Lou realises that the man she has to care
for is not Camilla’s husband (Charles Dance, a former Mr Rochester himself) but
their son Will. As the interview goes from bad to worse, she is startled to be
offered the job.
Will thinks it is enormously funny to impersonate Daniel Day
Lewis in My Left Foot. But the joke
is on him because I don’t think Lou was alive when My Left Foot was released – if he had impersonated Day Lewis in There Will Be Blood, she might have
understood the reference. Incidentally, Me
Before You is a period piece because at one point Lou and her ‘young
entrepreneur of the year’ fitness trainer Patrick (Matthew Lewis) go to see
‘the Adam Sandler film’. Who sees Adam Sandler movies at the cinema now?
Lou is startled by Will’s playacting but more put out when
he tells her that he doesn’t like her chattiness. Will cannot fire her – she
was hired by his mother. She does have the Australian physiotherapist, Nathan
(Steve Peacocke) to talk to. He does the heavy lifting.
Gradually, Lou and Will bond, over a Xavier Beauvois movie, Des Hommes et des dieux (Of Gods and
Men) no less. It is Lou’s first subtitled movie and she is bowled over by it –
‘why didn’t they just leave?’ It’s a shrewd choice for a cultural reference –
Sharrock and Moyes must be commended for not pandering to the audience by
picking something obvious, though the film is about an order of monks who
continue to serve their community in Algeria in the face of Muslim unrest. Lou
also meets Will’s ex, who is now dating his best friend (expletive). Then she
makes a shocking discovery.
That’s quite enough of the plot. The pleasure is in watching
the developing relationship – Lou shaving Will for the first time, during which
Sharrock cuts the incidental music, emphasizing the charged intimacy of one
face close to another and a razor blade. Sharrock is great at the delicate
moments, though much of the film plays broadly: a trip to the races in which
Will’s chair gets stuck in the mud; a Mozart concert; Lou’s birthday and a
wedding. Oh, as a bonus we get Sam Claflin’s audition tape for the role of
James Bond 007. You’ll see what I mean.
Me Before You has
been likened by the French drama The
Intouchables (avec François Cluzot et Omar Sy). Fortunately, I haven’t seen
it so I cannot say ‘what a rip off’. If the story beats are similar, this film
works on its own terms. It is hard to fake chemistry - Clarke and Claflin have
it in super-abundance. This ultimately elevates the film from ‘moving’ to ‘two
hankie job’.
What I really enjoyed was Lou’s refusal to dislike anyone.
She should be running the country. That said a woman at a racecourse restaurant
does get her back up. It is also a love story without sex, although there is
talk of it. It is a film about the refusal to compromise, of judging one’s own
value on life and of setting free the butterfly. The performances are uniformly
study from Jenna Coleman as Lou’s sister to Brendan Coyle as Lou’s dad, who
delivers the inspirational dad speech just in time for UK Father’s Day (19 June
2016). Me Before You is an unashamed
feel-good movie. It might even revive the fortunes of The Buttered Bun tearoom
enough for Lou to get her old job back.
Reviewed at Screen 11,
Cineworld Wood Green, North London, Sunday 29 May 2016, 10:30am preview
screening. With thanks to Show Film First and Warner Bros.
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
Comments
Post a Comment