Friday, March 15, 2024

One Life

Last night I went to see a Thursday preview of One Life, the true story of how an ordinary man did something extraordinary to save hundreds of children on the eve of World War II, and I am glad I brought tissues because I definitely needed them!  In 1988, Nicholas Winton (Anthony Hopkins) is retired and living in Maidenhead, England with his wife Grete (Lena Olin).  She is exasperated by all of the clutter that he has held on to over the years so, while she is out of town, he attempts to organize it and finds a scrapbook from his time helping refugees in Czechoslovakia.  As he thinks about what to do with the scrapbook, the narrative shifts to 1938 when twenty-nine year old Nicholas Winton (Johnny Flynn) visits Czechoslovakia after the Munich Agreement gives Hitler control of the Sudetenland.  He is horrified by the appalling conditions in which many of the refugees, but especially the children, pouring into Prague are forced to live and requests that Doreen Warriner (Romola Garai), the head of the British Committee for Refugees from Czechoslovakia, help them but she tells him that she must prioritize the political figures facing arrest.  He decides to evacuate the children himself with the help of his mother Babi (Helena Bonham Carter), herself a former refugee.  Nicholas and his mother overcome tremendous obstacles to acquire visas, raise funds, and find foster homes in England for 669 children, most of whom are Jewish, before the border is closed after the German invasion of Poland.  The narrative then shifts back to 1988 after Winton's scrapbook ends up with the producers of the That's Life! TV show.  He is invited to a taping of the show but is surprised to discover that many of the children he saved are in the audience (I loved that the descendants of the children saved by Winton were used as extras in this scene) and has an emotional reunion with them.  This movie is a very conventional British period piece in terms of execution (luckily I happen to love these) but it is elevated by an incredibly compelling and moving story and by wonderful performances.  I loved learning more about this unlikely hero who acts simply because of a sense of altruism and there are several poignant scenes that had me (and most of the audience) crying, especially one where Winton is finally able to express his feelings after repressing his guilt at not being able to save all of the children for so long and multiple scenes where parents say heart wrenching goodbyes to the children they will most likely never see again as they board the trains to England.  I also really liked a scene where the young Winton gives his reasons why a rabbi should trust him with a list of children's names.  Hopkins is brilliant, particularly in the silences, but I really love the way in which Flynn, in one of his best performances, adopts all of his mannerisms and the two of them really do seem like an older and younger version of the same person.  Bonham Carter is also a standout, especially when Babi imperiously tells a bureaucrat to sit down and listen to her and, even though Doreen is not a very well-developed character, Garai portrays her frustration in a very visceral way.  The message that one man can make a difference in the world is a powerful one and I highly recommend this inspiring movie (just bring lots of tissues).

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