Date: Fri 18-Jun-1999
Date: Fri 18-Jun-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SARAH
Quick Words:
Winslow-Mamet-Playing-Trey
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: A Brilliant Mamet Work Lives Up To The Challenge Of Dialogue
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Forgive me for stating the obvious, but film, at its roots, is a visual
medium. It's a vehicle based on moving images, hence the term, "motion
pictures." At its earliest, cinema was involved in storytelling that, aside
from some piano accompaniment, was communicated solely by what the viewer saw,
not heard. Dialogue, by necessity, was not part of the equation. For that, you
had to go to the theater, the playground of playwrights nimble in the art of
verbal exchange. Dialogue is also at the heart of The Winslow Boy , the newest
film from David Mamet, currently playing at the Bethel Cinema.
Set in 1912 and based on actual events, The Winslow Boy traces the ordeal of a
family whose name and honor are at stake when their youngest member,
13-year-old Ronnie (Guy Edwards), is expelled from a prestigious naval college
after having been implicated and quickly tried for the crime of stealing a
postal note. Despite evidence that screams his guilt, the Winslow boy
proclaims his innocence and gains the backing of his banker father, Arthur
(Nigel Hawthorne), and suffragist older sister, Catherine (Rebecca Ridgeon).
Together, they seek to clear Ronnie's name by any means necessary, including
ultimately risking the family's funds by hiring England's top lawyer, Robert
Morton (Jeremy Northam), to defend the young lad.
Though the theft of a five-shilling postal note seems trivial, it inflames the
passions of everyone in England. The Winslow home becomes swarmed by writers
seeking the latest quotes, and public opinion is captured daily in the
headlines of the newspapers and the pencils of the political cartoonists. Who
could have imagined that one trial could so capture a nation?
Mamet could have turned The Winslow Boy into a cunning commentary on our own
society's voracious appetite for media hype and coverage. Instead he has
evoked his roots as a playwright to draw the audience into the more interior
drama of this family and how the defense of the Winslow lad affects each
member and his or her relationship with one another. Our first indication of
his focus on the world of theater is his source material (the first time he
has adapted anyone else's work), a 1946 play by Terence Rattigan. What better
way to emphasize dialogue and deftness of word and phrase than by basing one's
movie on a stage drama?
Second, Mamet shies away from expanding the work even in the visual medium of
cinema. Over the course of the film's 110 minutes, most grand events happen
off screen. Though crowds flock to the Winslow doorstep, forcing family
members to often enter and exit covertly by the back door, Mamet never shows
us the gathering throng, nor does he put the critical courtroom scenes on
screen. It's as if all these things would distract us from his true concern,
the dynamics of the interplay between the principal characters and an
examination of their true motivations.
For this to work, Mamet's cast had better be good, able to keep our attention
riveted without benefit of peripheral action. They are up to the challenge. It
helps that they're given crackling dialogue filled with wit and rhythm (Mamet
proves his ability to play verbal ping-pong even without the four letter words
that often serve as cadence in his colloquy). Even in a pivotal sequence in
which Morton interviews young Winslow and mercilessly grills him in front of
his family, Northam and company perform brilliantly and give life to the
wonderful words on the page. Indeed, Northam is key, and his scenes with
Pidgeon (who fits better here than in The Spanish Prisoner ) are especially
good.
The Winslow Boy is rated G... a Mamet picture rated G?! Believe it, and
without any sacrifice of verbal cleverness, or pace.