| LA Times
Monday, December 10, 2001
MOVIES
Of Love and Death, and the
Flowering of a Film Called 'Iris'
By DAVID GRITTEN, Special to The Times
SOUTHWOLD, England
—
This sleepy eastern seaside resort is a favored destination for senior
citizens, who like its tranquility, its handsome Victorian architecture
and the flavor of gentler times it evokes.
The older brigade is out in force on this
early May day, although a chill easterly wind is cutting in from
Scandinavia. The pale sun peeks through the clouds just often enough to
make it worth braving the elements.
An elderly couple, huddling together to
keep warm as they wait at a bus stop, are typical. She wears a head
scarf, a worn winter coat and, in an eccentric touch, ankle socks over
her hose. Tufts of wiry white hair spring wildly from beneath his flat
cap; he is a vision in beige, from his faded raincoat to his pants and
shoes.
They fit so perfectly with the environment
that it's a shock to see film cameras turned on them. In reality, they
are two of England's most celebrated actors. She is Dame Judi Dench, the
stage veteran who in recent years has become an Oscar-night favorite for
her work in "Mrs. Brown," "Shakespeare in Love" and
"Chocolat." He is Jim Broadbent, a hugely experienced,
versatile performer who effortlessly shifts among theater, TV and film;
he made a notable appearance in "Moulin Rouge" as the club
owner with a show-stopping turn singing Madonna's "Like a
Virgin."
Although dressed to look like Mr. and Mrs.
Average, Dench and Broadbent are playing a renowned couple: the late
Dame Iris Murdoch, a philosopher of note and one of the most cerebral
and influential British novelists of the post-World War II era, and her
husband, John Bayley, an Oxford University academic. The film (which
opens Friday in limited release) is "Iris," based on Bayley's
touching, best-selling books "Iris" and "Iris and Her
Friends," detailing their last years together, when Murdoch's
brilliant intellect was ravaged by Alzheimer's disease.
The books captured the imagination of the
British reading public with their tender, matter-of-fact and even
humorous treatment of the way Murdoch's affliction affected the couple.
"Iris" may have a low budget (around $5 million), but its
pedigree is distinguished.
Its director is Richard Eyre, making his first
feature film since stepping down as artistic director of London's
National Theatre in 1997. Eyre has written the script, along with
playwright Charles Wood. The film's two producers are the American film
and theatrical producer Scott Rudin and Englishman Robert Fox, primarily
a theater producer who launched Dench's 1998 Broadway triumph as the
star of "Amy's View." The rest of the cast also demonstrates
strength in depth; Kate Winslet plays the younger Murdoch in flashback
scenes, while Hugh Bonneville ("Notting Hill") is the young
Bayley.
When a character in a film script falls
ill, it presents pitfalls, as Eyre acknowledged. "It's so not
intended to be a film about illness. It's a film about a relationship,
and the illness is just something that happens to the relationship.
"The idea was to make a film about
love, enduring love and the mutability of love, and at the same time,
someone losing their mind."
"Iris" has a personal resonance
for Eyre and Broadbent, both of whom lost their mothers to Alzheimer's.
"Sadly, I didn't need to do any research for this story," said
Broadbent. "My mother's death was part of the reason I was drawn to
the script. It was clearly very accurately written, a very honest
description of the disease ....
"Oddly, it's not all bleak and it's
not all dreadful. There's a lot of humor and love generated by the
disease, in a strange way."
Eyre's mother died nine years ago, but, he
said, "I didn't take on [the film] thinking in some way it would be
on behalf of my mother. I just thought, well, that's a subject I know a
lot about. And it's been less distressing than I thought .... I
wouldn't say it hasn't brought back memories, but it's possible to
objectify them becoming part of the work."
What Eyre found difficult was the
logistics of shooting the film in seven weeks, including five specific
weeks when Dench was available between stints of shooting "The
Shipping News" in Newfoundland. "Of course, it does
concentrate the mind wonderfully."
Yet "Iris" was originally
planned as a big-budget studio picture. Sony bought the rights to
Bayley's books, and studio chairman John Calley quickly approached Dench
to play Murdoch. "She's perfect casting, it goes without
saying," observed producer Fox. "She expressed interest from
that moment and remained committed to it through its ups and
downs."
Eventually, Sony put "Iris" into
turnaround, which Fox believes was actually a blessing: "It's not
really a studio film. It's a film that needs to be made for a price, and
if a studio was involved you'd never be able to make it for that price.
Now people are doing it because they want to, not because it's a
payday."
Calley had already asked Richard Eyre to
write and direct "Iris." When the studio dropped it, Miramax,
Intermedia and Britain's BBC picked up financing for the film. Anthony
Minghella ("The English Patient," "The Talented Mr.
Ripley") also became involved. "It could have been hard, with
seven producers involved," Eyre reflected. "That's about six
more than desirable. There was a nail-biting few months, seeing if the
film would get off the ground. But in the writing of the screenplay, I
got a lot of expert advice, especially from Scott and Anthony ....
"The other side of a low budget is
you get to make the film you want. All the people involved are bright,
so there's no crass intervention. No one for a moment has suggested the
film should be anything else but what it is."
"I never met Iris Murdoch," Judi
Dench said flatly. "I only wish I had." She has finished the
scene with Broadbent, having climbed aboard a bus and bid farewell to an
old friend of the couple (played by English stage actress Penelope
Wilton) whom she clearly does not recognize. Dench too has retired to
the relative warmth of her trailer, and is pondering the notion that her
casting seems perfect.
"I don't know about that," she
said finally. "This is certainly the hardest thing I've ever done.
So many people knew Iris Murdoch. I was a great fan of her novels a long
time ago. It's a wonderful love story, and I've watched masses of tapes
of interviews with her. I've talked to a lot of people who have known
her, so you get a kind of distillation of her, I hope. It comforts me to
know she's Anglo-Irish, like me. You can't hope to be her. All I can do
is to give the essence."
Part of Dench's challenge stems from the
novelist's lack of mannerisms: "She was an extraordinary
philosopher and writer, wonderful with words, but she didn't speak in a
dramatic way. She didn't throw her head back and deliver. Hers was a
contained way of speaking, no stresses on words and no gestures. She
needed to use just the right words, which was what made it terrible when
the Alzheimer's started."
Dench had expected it would be harrowing
to play Murdoch in decline. "In fact, I've managed to
be—objective isn't quite the word—but when you have a feeling about
something, you can use it as an actor. Grief produces incredible
adrenaline, and in a way this is running the adrenaline out. It's a use
for a whole lot of emotions."
She was alluding to two separate issues
here—Murdoch, and her own bereavement since the death earlier this
year of her longtime husband, actor Michael Williams. Dench threw
herself into work, accepting roles in three films: "Iris,"
"The Shipping News" and a new British production of "The
Importance of Being Earnest." "I don't know what
I'd have done otherwise," she said.
Broadbent said he had not sought to meet
Bayley, although he had listened to him on tape and managed to
approximate Bayley's trademark stutter. "After a while it might not
have been helpful to meet him," he mused. "The performance
will be more like me than him, anyway. It's my body. And I'm
taller."
Fox added that Bayley had read the script
and made suggestions, which had been adopted. "John and I have met,
talked and corresponded," Eyre confirmed. "He's been
encouraging and supportive, nothing but enthusiastic."
Murdoch's biographer and friend, the
academic Peter Conradi, has visited the set. "He was moved by
seeing Judi and Jim," Eyre said. "He said he thought they were
the essence of Iris and John."
All the elements in "Iris" look
promising, but it remains a low-budget film being shot in less than
ideal conditions. For the next scene, the crew decamped across a narrow
stretch of water (a single rowboat served as their ferry) to an isolated
house with a wooden balcony, set facing the sea. Dench, Broadbent and
Wilton would complete a funny conversational scene inside.
Because it was a night scene and the crew
arrived in mid-afternoon, the windows were darkened with a huge expanse
of black canvas, which proved troublesome. The wind was becoming fiercer
by the minute, and the canvas kept coming loose. Finally an assistant
director ordered everyone on set without a task to stand in a row and
hold down the canvas while the actors spoke their lines inside.
"This tells you all you need to know
about the British film industry," one observer snorted derisively.
And in truth, there was an element of farce in the proceedings. In the
wrong hands, everyone on set agreed, the story of Murdoch's last years
could make a perfectly awful film. But the script by Eyre and Wood has a
poetic, haunting, literary quality and does the subject justice.
"It's about love and Iris' philosophy
of it," mused Dench. "So how do you get that on film?
Certainly, Jim and Hugh Bonneville look uncannily alike. And if the same
[resemblance] can work between Kate and me, you never know, we might
have something."
Modestly, Dench leaves herself out of the
equation. But observers on set who have seen the dailies are astonished
by the quality she brings to the role. "I don't think anyone will
have seen Judi in anything quite like this," said Fox. "They
won't have seen the scope, the range she's able to show in this film,
which is staggering. Even when she's not saying anything, it's
extraordinary what she manages to convey without words. It's truly
remarkable."
Thank you to Sarah for
bringing this article to my attention.
November 25, 2006
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