Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Six Minutes to Midnight

Last night I saw Six Minutes to Midnight and, even though I am a huge fan of movies featuring World War II intrigue, I found this particular movie to be quite underwhelming.  England is on the brink of war with Germany but Miss Rocholl (Judi Dench) continues as headmistress of the Augusta-Victoria College for Girls, a finishing school for the wealthy daughters of Germany's most influential and powerful families including the Nazi High Command, located in the village of Bexhill-on-Sea.  She sees the school as a way to strengthen the cultural bond between England and Germany but one of the teachers, Ilse Keller (Carla Juri), has more ominous intentions and has attracted the attention of the British secret service.  An agent named Thomas Miller (Eddie Izzard) masquerades as a teacher, replacing another agent who has disappeared, in order to uncover her secrets but he is thwarted by a Hitchcockian plot twist that is more ridiculous than compelling.  The story of the school, which actually existed on the coast of England before the war, is absolutely fascinating (I wanted to know more about the girls and their motivations) but the fictionalized espionage narrative is very thin and doesn't always make sense.  There are far more questions than answers.  Dench gives an affecting performance as a woman devoted to her students but I wish that her character had been explored more fully.  Izzard seems incredibly miscast as a spy (the many scenes of Miller running from his pursuers are not only awkward but highly improbable).  The same could be said of Juri because her portrayal of a German spy is also very bland, consisting primarily of shouting commands in a monotone voice.  James D'Arcy is almost a caricature of a sinister double agent but Jim Broadbent is as genial as ever in a small but pivotal role.  The cinematography features stunning shots of the coastal location and the production design is moody and atmospheric in its depiction of the period but, unfortunately, this movie is more style than substance.  It is a mediocre entry in the spy genre and I would recommend waiting for its inevitable appearance on a streaming platform.

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