Conventional wisdom wouldn't seem to bless the idea of a romantic melodrama adapted
from Joseph Conrad by the director of To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar.
And yet, among Conrad's generally cool and reflective works the largely forgotten
tale, Amy Foster, on which Swept From the Sea is based, probably comes as close as
any being suited for this purpose. Kidron, meanwhile, displays a knack for walking
the razor-thin line between perfervid passion and schmaltz -- or at least knowing
when to cross it for maximum effect. Assuming that you're prepared for a certain
amount of emotional overkill and florid dialogue (and the filmmakers' intentions
couldn't have been clearer if they'd printed their posters on the embossed card stock
of Silhouette Romance covers), the images of impassioned lovers embracing atop windswept
crags, etc. should go down as easy as a sinfully rich brandy truffle. Regrettably,
for all of Kidron's skill manipulating the imagery of high romance, this really isn't
a love story in the traditional sense. Conrad's heroine is Foster (Weisz), an ethereally
beautiful English lass shunned by residents of her coastal fishing village because
of her alleged simple-mindedness and the reputedly scandalous circumstances of her
birth. Her response to this ostracism is to develop a flaky, Stevie Nicks-like pagan
wraith persona (no minor transgression in my book) that further alienates her from
the dour and god-fearing locals. One day, love enters her solitary world in the form
of Yanko (Perez, from Queen Margot and The Crow), a buff Russian cutie who's the
sole survivor of a wrecked immigrant ship. Though Yanko is scorned by most of the
xenophobic villagers to an even greater degree than Amy, he quickly becomes the object
of a tense rivalry between Amy and Dr. Kennedy (McKellen, whose poignantly suggestive
acting is the single best thing about this film), a cultured widower whose affection
for the studly foreigner contains more than a whiff of suppressed homoerotic bouquet.
But as we soon discover, neither of these love relationships is the real point of
Swept From the Sea. Though the romantic encounters between Amy and Yanko are plenty
torrid, they're few and brief. The story's larger theme, true to Conrad's design,
proves to be the human tendency to arbitrarily designate certain of our number as
The Other and to grossly -- sometimes disastrously -- misunderstand them. Kidron's
well-handled denouement drives this point home with legitimately tragic force. It's
good stuff, but unfortunately it's inconsistent in tone with both the movie's lushly
romantic opening scenes, and with the way it's being marketed. By trying to impose
an ill-fitting stylistic grandeur on a story that ultimately trades at least as much
on ideas as flamboyant emotion, Kidron probably will end up disappointing both the
Conrad purists in her audience and the romance-movie aficionados.
2.5 stars Russell Smith
--Russell Smith
Full Length Reviews
Swept From The Sea 
Other Films by Beeban Kidron
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar 
Film Vault Suggested Links
The Governess 
The Bridges of Madison County 
Before Sunrise 
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