art plymouth Archives | Plymouth Arts Cinema | Independent Cinema for Everyone | located at Arts University Plymouth. https://plymouthartscinema.org Tue, 20 Sep 2016 14:00:48 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 Film Review: The Daughter https://plymouthartscinema.org/film-review-the-daughter/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=film-review-the-daughter https://plymouthartscinema.org/film-review-the-daughter/#respond Fri, 05 Aug 2016 12:30:22 +0000 https://plymouthartscinema.org/?p=113 The Daughter is a remake of the Henrik Ibsen play Wild Duck. First performed in 1884, Ibsen’s play tells the story of a secret that threatens to blow apart the lives of two families. Director and screenwriter Simon Stone (here making his directorial debut, but a fixture of the Sydney theatre scene) transports the action...

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The Daughter is a remake of the Henrik Ibsen play Wild Duck. First performed in 1884, Ibsen’s play tells the story of a secret that threatens to blow apart the lives of two families.

Director and screenwriter Simon Stone (here making his directorial debut, but a fixture of the Sydney theatre scene) transports the action from Norway to a fictional logging town in Australia.

The town’s economy is built on the foundation of a logging mill, owned by Henry (played by Geoffrey Rush). The mill is in decline, and Henry has no choice but to close it down, meaning redundancy for its workers.

We met one of its workers, Oliver (played by Ewen Leslie) who is married to schoolteacher Charlotte (Miranda Otto). They have one daughter, Hedvig (played by Odessa Young). With them, lives Walter, Oliver’s father. A small town weaves close relationships, and we learn that Walter has been released from prison after serving time for white collar fraud, having worked with Henry at the logging mill.

Henry is due to get married for the second time to Anna (Anna Torv),his former housekeeper. Henry invites his son, Christian, from his first marriage to come home for the wedding. Christian (played by Paul Schneider) is a functioning alcoholic, his own marriage already in pieces. He returns for his father’s wedding, and it is revealed that his alcoholism stems from his mother’s suicide. Christian meets up with Oliver (they were childhood friends). The reunion starts off well, but Christian soon realises that Charlotte has not told Oliver a crucial detail about her past. The secret, when it is finally revealed, sets off a catastrophic string of events, and Oliver’s world implodes.

What is immediately clear about The Daughter is that this is not quite word-for-word homage to Ibsen, or kitchen-sink domestic drama. It pitches between the two, with Stone making some very bold and unconventional choices.

The Daughter is an Australian film through and through, but it removes the familiar iconography we think of as representing Australia – the sun, the beach, a virtually genetic predisposition for optimism. Stone uses the landscape (large parts of the film were shot in New South Wales) to break out from the Ibsen interior, and shoot the action against a green, lush backdrop. From the very start, it gives The Daughter a sense of otherness.

Stone’s decision to go outside is surprising, but what the open spaces allow is for the claustrophobia in Ibsen’s work to become internalised. Secrets build unspoken, threatening to combust at any minute. Family ties and tensions become tangled as the film unfolds. Certainties slip and founder, as the truth (despite Christian’s protestations) really is something to be afraid of.

The film builds to its conclusion delicately, slowly, with every note is played in a minor key – from the cast to the lighting. It is a film that thrives on the unconventional, and it takes a brave man to depart from the script, but Stone’s confidence, honed from years working in theatre, allows him to digress from Ibsen’s use of symbolism and instead concentrate on the close-knit drama between the two families.

The simplicity, with which their story is told, is testament to Stone’s abilities as a screenwriter. The actors are given room to really dig deep, and the film excels because of it. Geoffrey Rush seems tailor-made for Ibsen, portraying a complex inner life with ease, and Paul Schneider (a regular on TV sitcom Parks and Recreation) fleshes out Christian’s despair and alcoholism with real skill. Schneider treads the line between trauma and self-pity remarkably well, leaving us no choice but to interpret Christian’s motives with ambiguity at best.

While this is undoubtedly an ensemble film, it would be remiss of me not to mention the excellent Odessa Young who plays Hedvig, the eponymous daughter. Ibsen has a reputation for crafting memorable female characters, and Young paints Hedvig in bright, exuberant primary colours. It’s an extraordinary performance right up to the closing credits – expect to hear much more from her in the near future.

Anyone who’s familiar with A Doll’s House or Ghosts will know that Ibsen’s go-to move is to cast silence and complicity as the villain of the piece. Whether it comes from self-interest or self-preservation, Ibsen’s views on morality are difficult to unpick – he recognised that life isn’t drawn in a straight line, and wrote accordingly.

The film ends as it begins; with few definitive markers. Stone makes another bold decision in not adhering to the original ending of Wild Duck (not to give too much away), but what we’re left with is more ambiguity. What is the future for these characters? Can their fractured relationships be healed, or is it simply too late?

A good film should always leave you with a sense of satisfaction; but a great film always leaves you with more questions than answers, and The Daughter does exactly this. It’s a work with the courage of its convictions, and a great example of how filmmakers shouldn’t feel tied to source material. The Daughter takes a lot of chances, but the care with which the drama is handled, leaves us in no doubt that taking a risk can yield something as beautiful as it is unexpected.

Helen Tope

Twitter: @Scholar1977

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PAC Home Summer Workshop: RESEARCH AND RISO https://plymouthartscinema.org/pac-home-summer-workshop-research-and-riso/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=pac-home-summer-workshop-research-and-riso https://plymouthartscinema.org/pac-home-summer-workshop-research-and-riso/#respond Wed, 06 Aug 2014 13:47:25 +0000 https://blog.plymouthartscinema.org/?p=539 Research and Riso is the PAC Home summer workshop which 5 members have been working on with curator Nick Davies, and overseen by PAC programme assistant Vickie Fear. It will finally take the form of a zine, inspired by the role of chance, mistake & accident in the creative process. The project started looking at...

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Research and Riso is the PAC Home summer workshop which 5 members have been working on with curator Nick Davies, and overseen by PAC programme assistant Vickie Fear. It will finally take the form of a zine, inspired by the role of chance, mistake & accident in the creative process.

The project started looking at Max Delbrück’s Principal of Limited Sloppiness. In science this doesn’t mean sloppy as in acting carelessly, but working loose enough so that new discoveries can emerge, and structured enough that the experimenter will notice what has happened.

So we have all found ways to apply this to our practices, posting our findings to our shared blog & convening at meetings to see how and if this fits together. There is a lot of serious playfulness to our methods, being generous toward loose associations and allowing failure to happen. For me, the entire project based itself on unexpected results, and how to act on them. The work we were making involved a lot of ‘let’s see what happens’, tacit knowledge in our practice that discovery was now tapping into.

Seeing what happens has all the elements of research to it but also elements of serendipity. Either you can’t help or are forced to connect the dots of your findings. We are at the stage now where the final layout is nearing completion. It feels right that it has taken time for us each to work through what and how we want it to be, and there is a narrative in the mosaic like structure of the zine to the role of chance, mistake & accident.

It has been a great few weeks connecting with other PAC Home members, Nick & Vickie. There will be a launch event of the zine at the end of summer, we hope you enjoy it!

Hannah Guy Susan Hamston Olivia Lorne Charlotte Price Eve Woodbridge

12th June A warm June evening and 5 PAC Homers arrive at the Phoenix.   We are met by Nick and taken down down down to the depths of the building to what some might call an office, some call a studio and some unfortunates might refer to as a broom cupboard!  But it is home to Nick and his Risograph, which resides in the corner…waiting.  Resembling an overlarge photocopier it has the capability to print colours reminiscent of the muted washed away colours of vintage textiles.

The theme is chance and mistake.  The Ground Rules (see Tumblr. https://www.tumblr.com/blog/researchandriso) are a mandate for experimentation and playful associations to be made between related or totally unrelated themes, ideas, images, objects, conversations and so on….

Climbing the stairs to the summer evening light…I wonder what it is that everyone else is wondering…?

Not long to wait before the Tumblr…(as repository of ideas, imagery and text) starts to fill with the seeds of research and sometimes whimsical momentary thought.  The collaboration of artists intrigues … as the individual strands of interpretation unravel.

25th June The matter for debate was to zine or not to zine.  As the project was collaborative it would have somewhat missed the point to work on individual pieces so a zine it was!

10th July Talking again we begin to see how each artist works to the structure of the project and how the starting points are wide and diverse.  There is a common inclusion of text which becomes a principal element in the piece.  There are references to chance in the playing with cards  rather than playing card games and the misinterpretation of language, the random deterioration of materials through natural phenomenon and more.

In between I scatter the dead leaves of a plant (gathered on a walk) onto the scanner and blow upon the pieces to make a composition over which I have lost control.  The resulting images bring detail to the fore and an observation on the fragility of the material.  The plant is a dock..in fact a Rumex Conglomeratus..what lucky chance ..conglomeratus in a conglomerate zine!!

This playful handling of the organic material brings a new dimension to the work which preoccupies me in the studio and hopefully the other participants have had an equally inspiring experience.

25th July What happens now… to make the individual page images zine ready..selecting colours, make decisions on sizes and papers…and what shall it be named…

PAC Home is a peer support network and programme for visual arts practitioners in Plymouth and the wider region. To find out how you can join, click here.

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