| Newsday.com
December 14, 2001
Portrait of a
Brilliant Mind Slowly Losing It
http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/movies/ny-etiris2508805dec14.story?coll=ny%2Dmoviereview%2Dheadlines
By John Anderson
STAFF WRITER
MOVIE REVIEW
(2 1/2 STARS) IRIS (R). Two-pronged tale of novelist Iris Murdoch, as
free-wheeling Oxfordian and Alzheimer's victim. Judi Dench and Kate
Winslet are wonderful as Murdoch, but Jim Broadbent steals what is an
ultimately anemic movie. With Hugh Bonneville, Penelope Wilton, Juliet
Aubrey. Screenplay by Richard Eyre and Charles Wood, from John Bayley's
"Iris: A Memoir" and "Elegy for Iris." Directed by
Richard Eyre. 90 minutes (sex, nudity, profanity). At Loews Lincoln
Cineplex, Manhattan.
THE LAST DAYS of Iris Murdoch are a sad lesson in life's random cruelty.
Lionized, much beloved, Murdoch lost her mind before she lost her life -
a particularly unkind fate for anyone, but especially a woman ranked
among the 20th century's most important English writers, and one of its
more independent intellects.
As "Iris" makes abundantly clear - as did the books on which
it is based, John Bayley's "Iris: A Memoir" and "Elegy
for Iris" - you don't have to have Alzheimer's to be its victim.
Eschewing the circumspection of, say, Virginia Woolf's widower, Leonard,
Bayley's two books on his late wife give the consort's-eye view of life
with troubled, and troubling, literary royalty. In the end, we're not
quite sure for whom we're crying.
It might as well be Judi Dench and Kate Winslet, two fine actresses
giving terrific performances as Murdoch's older and younger selves,
albeit in severely undernourished parts. Although director Richard Eyre
moves gracefully and easily (frequently underwater) between his Irises -
the young Oxford libertine and budding intellectual; the older novelist,
stately, revered and slipping rapidly into mental disintegration -
there's not a lot besides the performances to hold on to. Winslet, for
whom nudity has never seemed any kind of impediment, is an infectiously
ribald character, although she might be any precocious '50s coed - we
never get at the root of exactly why Murdoch was so sexually, or for
that matter artistically, ahead of her time.
More affectingly, when Dench's Murdoch rifles through her fogging mind
as if it were a rusty filing cabinet, there's a sense of her seeing
herself from one lonely end of a long, black tunnel.
Ultimately, whom we get to know best is Bayley, who, as a young
Oxfordian (Hugh Bonneville), was tortured by Murdoch's bisexual
promiscuity, and as an aging gent is bedeviled by her disordered mind.
As the older Bayley, Jim Broadbent delivers what we've come to expect, a
sensitive, cerebral but humorous interpretation of his plight: The two
old intellectuals nervously navigating a modern supermarket is the kind
of humanizing element the film might have used more of.
Likewise, the squalid conditions Bayley finds himself in, as Iris
becomes too much for him to handle, are incorporated into the story
without much exploitation or heavy-handedness. And his annoyance at her
following him around, "nudging me like a water buffalo,"
crosses nicely with his desperation when she wanders off, and his
subsequently agonized memory when she's brought home by an old flame.
The love and anger he feels toward her seems honest and real (Murdoch
watching "Teletubbies" is something we might have skipped),
but while Bayley's sadness/exasperation with a condition he can't
control is the most moving thing about "Iris," one walks away
feeling it should have been Iris herself. For all the good acting, this
film's a bit less than she deserved.
Thanks to Cindy F.
March 13, 2010
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