Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Benediction

I have a fascination with World War I and I am always drawn to movies set during this historical period so I went to see Benediction, a biographical drama about the war poet Siegfried Sassoon, last night at the Broadway.  After receiving the Military Cross for bravery, Siegfried Sassoon (Jack Lowden) speaks out against how the government is prosecuting the war.  Rather than be court-martialed, his mother (Geraldine James) and a family friend (Simon Russell Beale) use their influence to have him declared mentally unfit and sent to a psychiatric facility against his will to recuperate.  Despite his therapy sessions with the sympathetic Dr. Rivers (Ben Daniels) and his friendship with fellow poet Wilfred Owen (Matthew Tennyson), his experiences on the Western front plague him for the rest of his unhappy life.  He has a series of doomed love affairs with men, including the musician Ivor Novello (Jeremy Irvine), actor Glen Byam Shaw (Tom Blyth), and socialite Stephen Tennant (Calam Lynch), he enters into a loveless marriage with Hester Gatty (Kate Phillips), he has a tense relationship with his son George (Richard Goulding), and he has a crisis of faith after converting to Catholicism.  It is his tortured existence that informs his brilliant and haunting poetry which eventually brings him the acceptance he so desperately craved but never found in life after his death.  With its non-linear narrative and beautiful cinematography, this movie almost feels as if it is one of Sassoon's poems and, even though it is incredibly slow, it is ultimately very moving.  The use of Sassoon's poems read by Lowden and Peter Capaldi, who plays the older Sassoon, along with archival footage of the war interspersed throughout is very effective in showing that Sassoon is never free from the horrors of war.  The performances are all excellent (I especially enjoyed Irvine's version of "And Her Mother Came Too") but Lowden's subtle portrayal of grief is absolutely captivating.  The scene in which Sassoon says goodbye as Owen leaves to return to the front and the final closeup on Sassoon with the voiceover of Owen's poem "The Disabled" almost destroyed me.  This is a heartbreaking but beautiful movie that was so compelling I immediately wanted to know more about Sassoon and read more of his poetry after watching it.  I recommend it to fans of biographical dramas.

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