Elegy Movie Review
Elegy Review
"Elegy" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Isabel CoixetProducer : Andre Lamal,Gary Lucchesi,Tom Rosenberg
Screenwiter : Nicholas Meyer
Starring : Ben Kingsley,Penélope Cruz,Patricia Clarkson,Peter Sarsgaard,Dennis Hopper,Deborah Harry
Not every book is meant to be adapted into a movie. Come to think of it, not
every author is meant for celluloid success. Philip Roth has won pretty much
every major book prize, save for the Nobel, and he's overdue for that. His
books masterfully examine the fragile side of the middle-aged male ego, and how
sex and family and desire eat away at men's souls. With Updike, Mailer, and
Bellow gone, Roth is the messiah of American literature.
There's just one problem: Books like his make crappy movies. Roth said as much
to GQ's Andrew Corsello, adding that he hasn't been pleased with any of the
adaptations, especially The Human Stain. Roth's take: "Awful! And the same
people have American Pastoral."
I know that producers are always looking for big, important books to make into
bigger, more important movies, which is why The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier
& Clay is on its way to the theaters. That's fine if it gets people reading.
But Roth's books (and I've read many of them) are driven by internal struggles.
It's the same reason why Stanley Kubrick's Lolita didn't work. (That, and there
were no explosions or car chases.) Every part of Roth's writing is so intricate
and measured that a director can't just transfer the written page to the
screen. Unless you have a masterful director, a great screenwriter, and gifted
actors, you're going to get ham-fisted acting showcases or ponderous life
meditations. The former happened to Robert Benton when he adapted The Human
Stain, and the latter nearly happens in Elegy, director Isabel Coixet's take on
Roth's The Dying Animal.
Professor and cultural critic David Kepesh (Ben Kingsley) --"a rake among
scholars, a scholar among rakes," according to Roth -- eyes sultry student
Consuela Castillo (Cruz) in his class and makes it his mission to get her.
Kepesh does, which is incredible considering she's some 30 years his junior and
way out of his league. Typical of a Roth character, Kepesh wants to have his
cake and eat it too. He certainly wants -- possesses is actually a better word
-- Consuela, but on his terms. That means he wants to maintain his independence
-- including his long-term sex buddy (Patricia Clarkson) -- and his space.
Besides, Kepesh's last attempt at domesticity was an utter failure, leaving him
with an ex-wife and a very bitter son (Sarsgaard). Consuela genuinely loves
Kepesh, but the man's self-doubt and raging insecurity allows him to gradually
sabotage the relationship, which ironically turns Kepesh into a human being
capable of love.
The leads give great performances, especially Kingsley, who embodies the virile
angst that defines Roth's characters. He thrives inside the shades of grey. And
director Coixet examines the dark side of the male ego with complete confidence
and insight -- for about an hour. Then the movie runs out of ideas, and efforts
to jog the proceedings (the presence of Sarsgaard; the death of a major
character) can't get it back on track. Essentially, we get a character study
stretched beyond effectiveness.
Still, the movie is worth seeing if only for the first-rate performances and
the movie's fierce intelligence. It'll make you want to read Roth, and see how
the master paints on his own smaller canvas. Bigger, as always, isn't always
better.
Let's go for ice cream.
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Review by Pete Croatto
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