The English Patient Movie Review
The English Patient Review

"The English Patient" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Anthony MinghellaProducer : Saul Zaentz
Screenwiter : Anthony Minghella
Starring : Ralph Fiennes,Juliette Binoche,Kristin Scott Thomas,Willem Dafoe,Naveen Andres,Colin Firth,Jürgen Prochnow
Just so you know, "patient" refers to a man with a medical condition, not the
ability to sit through a film that flirts with a three hour running time.
You think I'm kidding, but I'm serious -- The English Patient has got to be the
longest romance movie I've ever seen [This was before Titanic. -Ed.]. Well,
Out of Africa was awfully long, too, but that doesn't make it okay! (Like your
mother might say, "If Meryl Streep jumped off a cliff, would you do it too?")
Okay, I'm being melodramatic, but my three hours in the front row (not by
choice) didn't do my neck a bit of good, and if this review seems a bit grumpy,
I refuse to be held responsible.
he English Patient is a grand tale of love and loss set during the backdrop of
the African theatre of WWII. Told using a structure that busts Hollywood's
Three Acts wide open, we follow a man we eventually come to know as The Count
(Ralph Fiennes), whose plane has been shot down near the start of the war.
Horribly disfigured in the resulting fire and an apparent amnesiac, the Count
finds himself in the hands of Hana (Juliette Binoche), a Canadian nurse. While
the war plays out, with Hana and the Count holed up in an abandoned monastery,
so does the truth about the Count's past -- an intrigue-filled tale of
adventure, love, and tragedy.
Fiennes is spectacular is the mystery man, and Kristin Scott Thomas (who plays
the Count's flashback love interest) shows that, when she dyes her hair blonde,
she can seriously burn up the screen. Also look for Willem Dafoe in one of his
most earnest and accessible roles to date. Serious praises are deserved by the
film's art director and editor, and I'll be absolutely shocked if The English
Patient doesn't take home a Best Makeup Design Oscar. (It didn't even get
nominated! Though it won 9 Oscars in the end. -Ed.)
The only problem with the film, besides severe butt-ache, is a number of holes
in writer/director Anthony Minghella's (Truly Madly Deeply) screenplay. You'd
think that with that extra hour, he could fill these holes up, but I guess not.
No matter. The English Patient is still a solid story and an
exquisitely-produced film. There's always enough going on to hold the viewer's
eye, or even get you to shed a tear or two. Just be forewarned that the best
films always have sad endings.
The long-awaited DVD adds another disc to make for copious extras. Minghella
provides extensively-introduced deleted scenes, a making-of featurette, and a
historical vignette on the real Count Almasy. Two feature-length commentary
tracks may be overkill, and the remaining extras could take up your entire
weekend. Highly, highly recommended.
Looks like somebody forgot their hat!!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





