The End of the Affair Movie Review
The End of the Affair Review

"The End of the Affair" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil JordanProducer : Neil Jordan,Stephen Woolley
Screenwiter : Neil Jordan
Starring : Ralph Fiennes,Julianne Moore,Stephen Rea,Ian Hart,Sam Bould
I was dragged to see The End of the Affair expecting another lavishly costumed,
pointless period romance of the Merchant-Ivory type ... only based on Graham
Greene instead of Jane Austen or E. M. Forster. The kind of movie that our
wives drag us to. Instead, I was converted.
The End of the Affair makes a lot of serious points, and offers a very modern,
psychological drama in spite of the period setting (London during World War
II). Instead of being another revisionist Hollywood remake, The End of the
Affair is the best kind of historical drama: one that reminds you that history
was made of real people and their emotions --- love, pain, jealousy, and
emptiness.
The film revolves around a wartime affair between Sarah Miles (Julianne Moore),
the wife of a civil servant, and a writer, Maurice Bendrix (Ralph Fiennes), who
becomes her jealous lover. Bendrix hires an investigator (drolly played by Ian
Hart) to follow Sarah, convinced that she can't love him as purely as she
does. Ultimately, he finds that the rival for her affections is not another
lover, but something more unexpected.
Graham Greene, who converted to Catholicism before writing The End of the
Affair, was one of the last generation of writers (along with contemporaries
like Evelyn Waugh, C.S. Lewis, and William Faulkner) to seriously consider the
implications of religious belief. Greene's refusal to resolve his ambivalent
faith is transcribed in the movie, which goes deeper than the fashionable
nihilism of most movies these days.
Director Neil Jordan returns to form with this work. Jordan has brought
Greene's novel alive, revealing the conflicted, turbulent emotions of the
survivors of the Blitz. The cast is excellent, including Fiennes as the lout
and Stephen Rea as the cuckold; but Moore's sensual portrayal of Sarah, an
ordinary individual forced to struggle with belief, is the most haunting, and
worth an Oscar nod.
The End of the Affair offers a much more balanced view of faith than many
supposedly religious movies --- unlike, say, The Green Mile, with its
unbelievable Christ-figure and obvious social-gospel message, or the whiny,
cliched despair of Angela's Ashes. By holding God accountable for pain and
suffering as well as miracles, the makers of The End of the Affair capture the
uncertainty and passion of people struggling with real faith.
We wished it didn't End.
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Review by David Bezanson
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