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The Governess
Minnie
Driver stars as an impoverished Jewish woman, Mary, living in
an emphatically anti-Semitic England in the mid-19th century.
Following the murder of her beloved father--who leaves his survivors
strapped with his debts--she camouflages her identity as a Protestant
of Italian descent and takes a job as governess to an unorthodox
Scottish family. In this film by Sandra Goldbacher, sundry conventions
from Victorian novels mix with a contemporary, feminist take on
Mary's subsequent adventures. Mary asserts, with some effort,
her authority over her willful charge (Florence Hoath); she dodges
the insults of a vaguely ghoulish matriarch (Harriet Walter);
and she becomes an aide, confidante, and lover to the man of the
house (Tom Wilkinson), a naturalist dabbling with early experiments
in photography. Goldbacher fails to make it all feel as fully
realized as it could be (much of the detail and soul of Mary's
life in London is too telescoped and impressionistic to sink in).
But the film's middle section, in which the heroine's complicity
with Wilkinson's married character engages her keen intelligence
as well as her untapped sensuality, is deeply felt. It's nice
to see Driver prove she can carry a film, though the dreamy, exotic
photography by Ashley Rowe certainly pulls a viewer along as well.
--Tom Keogh
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