Film Review
Roman Polanski's slick adaptation of Robert Harris's bestselling novel
The Ghost may not have quite the
inspired touch of his earlier cinematic achievements but it is
nonetheless a highly effective thriller, dark and brooding, with an
unmistakably Hitchcockian patina. The similarities with
Polanski's previous thrillers -
Chinatown (1974) and
Frantic
(1988) - are readily apparent and all three films deal with the same
basic plot idea: an incorruptible everyman character is plunged into a
Kafkaesque nightmare as he pursues a private investigation against a
dangerous unseen adversary. It is a modern reinterpretation of
the classic film noir (dubbed
neo-polar)
that was immensely popular in France in the late 1970s, and the kind of
film that Polanski does exceptionally well.
Harris's novel, a compulsive page-turner if ever there was one, came
out just before the former British Prime Minister Tony Blair published
his autobiography, and it was pretty self-evident that the discredited
Prime Minister Adam Lang in Harris's book was intended to be read as a
carbon copy of Blair. Polanski goes further than Harris dared in
his book in making connections between Lang and Blair and the film's
success at the box office no doubt owes something to this and the wish
fulfilment to see Blair brought to account, if only in a work of
fiction. However, to dismiss the film as simply an attack on a
tarnished former Prime Minister is largely to miss its point.
What the film is really commenting on is the hysteria that flared up in
the later years of Blair's premiership over his supposed eligibility
for a war crimes indictment. The ease with which the central
character in the film - an unnamed, sympathetic ghost writer - allows
himself to be duped into thinking Lang is far more than he is contains
a chilling echo of the feeding frenzy and mass delusion to which many
succumbed following Blair's resignation. The problem with easy
scapegoats is that they distract us from seeing who the real enemy is -
which is
very convenient for
those who wish it to be so.
Paranoid delusion has featured in many of Roman Polanski's films and
few film directors have managed to convey the trauma of mental
breakdown with such dramatic and visual power.
Repulsion
(1965),
Rosemary's Baby (1968) and
The
Tenant (1976) each offers a terrifying account of a
seemingly well-adjusted individual gradually succumbing to
psychological collapse triggered by an insane delusion. Whilst
the anonymous hero of
The Ghost
Writer (superbly played by Ewan McGregor at his most convincing)
shows no sign of mental abnormality, he is clearly teetering on the
brink of a breakdown, and therefore (in the best tradition of political
thriller) incapable of ascertaining who is real enemy is. It is
not until late in the film that we realise Lang is not so much the
writer's nemesis as his shadow, his ghost if you will. Both men
allow themselves to become trapped by their paranoia, and inevitably
both end up as unwitting pawns in a dangerous game of political
hide-and-seek. Had he been a few years younger and a little more
daring, Polanski would perhaps have made more of this crucial duality
and concluded the film with something akin to the wild hysteria of
The Tenant's terrifying
denouement. Instead, he takes a far more sober and ambiguous
line, which is perhaps better suited for a modern political thriller.
The fact that Roman Polanski was himself a wanted man at the time he
was making the film adds a certain frisson of irony to it.
Dodging an extradition order from the US so that he could face charges
of rape in a US criminal court, Polanski had no choice but to make the
film in Europe (mainly in Germany). Before completing the film,
he was placed under house arrest for several months at his home in
Switzerland, after being arrested whilst on his way to a film festival
in Zurich in September 2009 - an incident which has a bizarre parallel
in the film. Fans of Polanski were quick to condemn the US
authorities for what they saw as unjustified persecution, and the
publicity surrounding the director's arrest may have contributed to the
critical acclaim the film received on the continent. The film not only
won Polanski the Best Director award at the Berlin Film Festival in
2010, it also garned him eight César nominations in 2011,
including four wins (for Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best
Editing and Best Score) - a rare achievement for an English language
film, beating Polanki's tally of three Césars for his previous
success,
The Pianist (2002).
The Ghost Writer may owe its
initial popularity to the ephemeral politics of the day (anti-American,
anti-Blair sentiment), but its obvious technical merit, together with
some flawless performances and a compelling storyline, should ensure
its longevity and may even earn it a place alongside Polanki's other great films.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Roman Polanski film:
Carnage (2011)
Film Synopsis
The former British Prime Minister Adam Lang is about to publish his
autobiography, which is of course to be written by an unnamed
professional writer. When the ghost writer originally assigned to
the project, former ministerial aide Mike McAra, dies in mysterious
circumstances, another British writer is hired to replace him.
Barely before the ink has dried on his contract, the young writer is
flown out to the isolated island off the east coast of the United
States where Lang resides with his wife Ruth and dedicated staff.
The writer is shown McAra's manuscript but is instructed he must on no
account take it away from Lang's secure residence. Meanwhile,
British Foreign Secretary Richard Rycart is seeking Lang's arrest
through the International Criminal Court for his alleged
complicity in the extradition and torture of terrorist suspects.
By chance, the writer comes across some incriminating photographs and
documents which connect Lang with an important American academic who
has CIA connections. Is it possible that Lang was in the pocket
of the CIA throughout his time in office? As he begins his
investigation into Lang's shady past, the writer soon realises that he
is venturing into very dangerous territory...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.