Wednesday, September 4, 2019

The Nightingale

I was very intrigued by the trailer for The Nightingale but I wasn't sure that I wanted to see it because I had heard that it was incredibly violent (many people walked out when it was screened at the Venice Film Festival).  However, one of my friends recommended it so highly that I changed my mind and saw it last night.  To be sure, it is absolutely brutal but it is also beautiful and one of the best films I've seen all year.  In Van Diemen's Land (present-day Tasmania) in the early 1800s, Clare (Aisling Franciosi) is an Irish convict serving as a laborer for a British Army outpost under the command of Lieutenant Hawkins (Sam Claflin).  An officer is visiting to determine if Hawkins should be promoted to Captain.  Clare's sentence has expired but Hawkins refuses to release her because he likes to hear her sing and calls her his Nightingale.  When Clare's husband Aidan (Michael Sheasby) drunkenly demands that Hawkins release her, it ends in an altercation that ultimately loses Hawkins his promotion.  In retaliation, Hawkins and his second-in-command brutally rape Clare and then he kills Aidan and their baby daughter.  Hawkins decides to travel through the treacherous bush to the town of Launceston to advocate for the promotion himself.  After persuading an Aboriginal tracker named Billy (Baykali Ganambarr) to help her, Clare decides to follow him through the bush to get revenge.  This is a very Gothic revenge film but, more than that, it is a beautiful story of friendship that is incredibly affecting.  Clare and Billy form an uneasy alliance and are hostile to each other until she learns of the atrocities perpetrated against the Aborigines and they bond over their mutual hatred of the British.  Billy (whose Aboriginal name means Blackbird) saves her life several times and they come to rely on each other and then care for each other.  I really loved watching their relationship unfold and there were many times when I was moved to tears.  The symbolism in this film is so powerful and I especially loved a scene where they get separated and a blackbird guides Clare back to the road.  The message about the evils of colonialism is also very powerful and I think it is one that everyone should hear.  Franciosi gives one of the most riveting performances that I have seen all year, Ganambarr is incredibly sympathetic as Billy (I was a sobbing mess during a scene where he breaks down and says that Australia is his country), and Claflin is so loathsome as Hawkins that it was hard for me not to hate him.  The cinematography is absolutely stunning, particularly the gorgeous final shot, and the score is so evocative.  There is no doubt that this movie is difficult to watch.  I do think the violence is very organic and not at all gratuitous but it is definitely not for the faint of heart.  Nevertheless, I highly recommend it.

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