Film Review
This distinctive work from acclaimed French film director Jean-Jacques Annaud was inspired
by Umberto Eco's best selling intellectual thriller
Il
nome della rosa (a kind of
The Da Vinci
Code for those who have progressed beyond the
Harry
Potter level of English literature). With its brooding cinematography, austere,
shadow-draped sets and sinister ensemble of ghoulish characters,
The
Name of the Rose is a film unlike any other. The dark, stifling atmosphere
is suggestive of mankind's ignorance at a time that was steeped in fear and superstition,
and this is contrasted effectively with the reason and humanity of the story's main character,
William of Baskerville (played beautifully by Sean Connery).
Stylistically, the film can hardly be faulted. Annaud creates a world quite
unlike anything anyone of us has ever experienced, and his approach readily draws the
spectator straight into the drama and the period in which it is set. Unfortunately,
this sense of wonder is barely sustained for more than thirty minutes or so, because by
this stage it is more than apparent that there isn't much beneath this remarkable surface
impression.
Visually stunning the film may be, but this cannot disguise the fact
that dramatically it is pretty vacuous. Apart from William of Baskerville, none
of the characters is drawn with any great depth, and most come across as caricatured,
totally unsympathetic grotesques (rather like the creations in Annaud's previous film,
La
Guerre de feu). As in so much of Annuad's work, the brilliance of what
we see on the surface is not matched by what lies beneath it. Whilst the film manages
to hold our attention (in spite of some uneven pacing which makes some sequences
very
confusing), there's little in the way of emotional depth and real human feeling.
This is surprising when there is so much meaning and psychological maturity in Eco's original
novel, and it's somewhat disappointing that so little of this made its way into the film.
In spite of this,
The Name of the Rose is an
extraordinary work - not perfect, but one that offers a cinematic experience that is
refreshingly strange and uncomfortable.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Jean-Jacques Annaud film:
L'Ours (1988)
Film Synopsis
In the 14th Century, a travelling monk William of Baskerville undertakes a pilgrimage
to a remote North Italian monastery to attend a theological discussion between the local
monks and senior representatives of the Church. He is accompanied only by his young
acolyte, Adso. William's arrival is overshadowed by the death of one of the brethren.
The monks believe it is the work of the Devil, but William quickly concludes that the
man committed suicide. Another death follows and it becomes apparent that some great
evil is at large. Whilst William tries to learn the truth through rational investigation,
the monks become increasingly certain that witchcraft is involved and the Inquisition
are invited to take charge of the proceedings. Can William resolve the mystery before
innocent men and women are condemned to a brutal death?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.