52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 60. A UNITED KINGDOM (Director: Amma Asante)
The final film in my review of fifty-two (well, sixty) films
directed by women is ‘A United Kingdom’,
director Amma Asante’s follow-up to her acclaimed ‘Belle’ (2014). Asante, born
in London in 1969 to Ghanaian parents, is a former child actress who became a writer
(the UK TV series ‘Brothers &
Sisters’, about a Baptist choir in Liverpool, first broadcast in 1998) and
a film director in 2004 with ‘A Way of
Life’. It took a further nine years before the release of ‘Belle’, illustrating the difficulty of
getting a second feature off the ground.
Asante was primed to make her Hollywood debut in 2015 with
the Warner Bros thriller ‘Unforgettable’
but left the project to make ‘A United
Kingdom’. Whether she left ‘Unforgettable’
and then was approached by actor-producer David Oyelowo to direct ‘A United Kingdom’ isn’t clear. It is
usual in the film business to develop several projects simultaneously and then
to prioritise the one most likely to be green-lit for production.
At any rate, ‘A
United Kingdom’ establishes Asante as the go-to director for mixed race
romances in period settings, at least as far as funding is concerned - ‘Belle’ turned a small profit, and that’s
what counts. Interesting subject matter doesn’t always make for inspiring
movies and so it proves with this. The epic nature of the story – it spans a
couple of decades – all but defeats Asante and the screenwriter Guy Hibbert (‘Eye in the Sky’) though in my mind it
fails because of the absence of a principal viewpoint character.
In general romances are skewed towards one or other of the
parties. A beautiful, headstrong young woman (our heroine) meets a handsome,
charismatic man and joins him in bondage – that’s the plot of ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’, but you knew
that already. One or other of the parties is objectified across a crowded room,
then there’s the pursuit and the complications, a misunderstanding, a coming to
one’s senses and the ‘happy’ ending, possibly involving leather goods.
In ‘A United Kingdom’,
Asante cuts between feisty young bank clerk, Ruth Williams (Rosamund Pike) and
English educated Seretse Khama (Oyelowo), Prince of Bechuanaland, in London in
1947. They meet at a party for missionaries, see each other again and then Ruth
accepts Seretse’s proposal of marriage. However, Seretse is forbidden from
taking Ruth back to Bechuanaland. The government of its neighbour, South Africa
had just adopted the policy of apartheid (in 1948), segregating blacks from
whites. A country ruled by the happy union of a black king and a white queen
would upset their powerful industrious neighbour, resulting in unspecified
action to be taken against British interests.
To understand what was at stake at that time, regardless of
one thinks of the morality of it – and apartheid is morally reprehensible on
every level – one has to look at the relationship between Great Britain and
South Africa at the time. Britain did not expect Dr Daniel F. Malan’s National
Party to win the election of 26 May 1948 against the Unionist Party led by ‘war
hero’ Field Marshal Jan Smuts. South Africa had provided Britain with a gold
loan, so the two countries were bound economically. Britain did not expect the
rule of Malan’s National Party to last – certainly not until 9 May 1994. In
1949, South Africa passed the ‘Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act’ meaning that
Ruth and Seretse’s union would not to be tolerated if (for any reason) they
wanted to visit.
Ruth and Seretse’s story is told in broad strokes. Early on,
whilst in the midst of a university boxing bout, Seretse is distracted in the
ring by a racial epithet and is floored by a punch. The English, we learn from
this scene, fight dirty – and boy, do they ever. What keeps Ruth and Seretse is
the faith in their relationship and a means by which Seretse could prove
Bechuanaland’s worth to the British, who acted as protectorate for that
country.
As well as standing up to the British, Seretse has to prove
the suitability of his bride to his uncle, Tshekedi (Vusi Kunene, star of the
Soweto TV hit, ‘Generations’). A
public meeting – a kgotla - takes
place and Seretse rouses the crowd to his side.
Complications ensue: the British want to encourage the
couple to go back to England for a private meeting. Seretse goes, Ruth stays.
Then Seretse is told his suitability to rule has been the subject of a report
led by Justice Harragin. A Government Official (Jack Davenport) tells Seretse has
been judged unfit to lead his country. Ruth discovers she is pregnant.
I don’t want to give away the ending – how the couple is
reunited and gets round the suppression of the Harragin Report – Labour MP Tony
Benn (Jack Howden), complete with pipe, makes an appearance. Suffice to say,
the ending isn’t achieved through a persuasive act by either Seretse or Ruth,
unless you count Seretse’s understanding of mining interests.
This is a very un-Hollywood biopic that lacks the big
gestures and real catharsis of the best historical romances. It does have some
nice moments, notably after Ruth is invited to a dance by Seretse. ‘Can you get
two tickets?’ pleads Ruth’s sister, Muriel (Laura Carmichael). ‘No, I will
not,’ snaps Ruth, anxious to deepen her acquaintanceship with the jazz loving
Seretse. (He sends her a record as a gift.)
Jack Davenport’s character, Alistair Canning, isn’t a real
person, but some of his scenes are filmed in the UK Foreign and Commonwealth
Office (with its colonialist paintings on the wall); the location has more
veracity than the character.
Having played Martin Luther King, Oyelowo can handle the
great, passionate speech. Disappointingly, his character is all declamation and
no internal depth. Seretse is defined only by his love for Ruth and a general
ambition for his country. We get only a little sense of how he turned the newly
independent Botswana into the world’s fastest growing economy between 1966 and
1980. The only indication in the film is when he spots a mining truck and
realises something is afoot. Of course, no one wants to watch a film where the
main characters debate economics in post colonial Africa – except maybe they
ought to.
‘A United Kingdom’
is a middle-ground, middle-order middling film that even makes Rosamund Pike
look ordinary. Pike occasionally affects a London accent but then drops into
Home Counties, as if somehow she would feel that London would never do. There
is an amusing moment when Ruth practices a queenly wave, but just as her
struggle to adapt to a new way of life in Bechuanaland becomes interesting,
Asante moves back to Seretse’s story.
Asante has complained that Hollywood doesn’t trust women to
helm really big films. She has a point but doesn’t make a film that suggests
that Hollywood is missing out. Asante’s films pay attention to politics but are
otherwise exposition heavy and formally unremarkable. Hibbert, adapting Susan
Williams’ book ‘Colour Bar’, is a
good screenwriter, but his writing is fairly functional here. That said, Asante
gives the audience enough to sense that her true breakthrough film is ahead of
her. I shall look forward to it.
Reviewed at Cineworld
Cheltenham, Wednesday 5 October 2016, 19:30 screening – opening film, London
Film Festival (regional premiere)
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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