Shine Movie Review
Shine Review

"Shine" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Scott HicksProducer : Jane Scott
Screenwiter : Jan Sardi
Starring : Geoffrey Rush,Noah Taylor,Alex Rafalowicz,Armin Mueller-Stahl,Lynn Redgrave,John Gielgud,Googie Withers
In Hollywood, you just can't make a movie like Shine. Put simply, it is just
not allowed.
This is our loss and Australia's gain, because Shine comes off as one of the
upper-echelon films of the year, an ambitious and unflinching look at that
country's David Helfgott, a prodigy of a pianist driven insane by his father,
only to emerge again after 20 years of institutionalization.
The film tracks David's tumultuous life from young boy (Alex Rafalowicz) to
young man (Flirting's Noah Taylor) to adulthood (Australian stage actor
Geoffrey Rush). David's father Peter (Armin Mueller-Stahl) pushes young David
so hard (his motto: "Win! Win! Win!") that his mind slowly crumbles before
our very eyes. And while Peter wants David to be The Best, he doesn't want him
away from home, and his overprotectionism, combined with Peter's insistence
that David master Rachmaninoff's 3rd Piano Concerto (the "Rach 3," considered
one of the most difficult piano pieces ever written), eventually drives David
over the edge.
Extremely compelling for a film that is essentially a character study of one
man, Shine succeeds by leaving out no detail and by masterfully using the
camera to capture an inner turmoil that would be impossible for us to feel
otherwise. Exquisite is the string of five-star performances by Rush, Taylor
(a favorite of mine), Mueller-Stahl, and supporting players John Gielgud and
Lynn Redgrave. Rush's frantic jabbering as the insane adult Helfgott so
perfectly captures the mood that he deserves (and is receiving) serious
notice. And let me not forget the music, which is awe-inspiring (especially
the unbelievable Rach 3), and which makes you want to applaud after each piece
is performed.
Shine isn't flawless, though -- the biggest problem is a serious defect in the
sound quality, normally no big deal, but inexcusable in a film about music.
The roundabout plot structure will not appeal to every filmgoer, and when the
movie was over, I felt a bit cheated by the lack of a real ending. (Helfgott
has returned to sanity and is allegedly going to play at the Oscars if Shine is
nominated -- an event that the film, as it stands, would never portend.) [Note
that Helfgott did play at the Oscars and Jan Sardi wrote to say that the sound
problems should have been present at my screening only -- he was right. -Ed.]
I guess you can't have everything. But maybe leaving the audience hungry for
more was the whole idea.
Taylor as the young adult Helfgott.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





