View all comments (3) - Comment on this review
Tristan & Isolde Movie Review
Tristan & Isolde Review

"Tristan & Isolde" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Kevin ReynoldsProducer : Ridley Scott,Tony Scott,Elie Samaha
Screenwiter : Dean Georgaris
Starring : James Franco,Sophia Myles,Rufus Sewell,David O’Hara,Mark Strong,Henry Cavill,J.B. Blanc,Jaime King
Kevin Reynolds is one of Hollywood’s most unjustly maligned filmmakers. I’m
frequently astounded by the fact that his superior craftsmanship is not more
widely recognized. Surely his attention to detail and sensual prowess is equal
that of championed filmmakers like Ridley and Tony Scott (who both produced
this film).
I suspect that most of this disregard is due to the fact that more often than
not Reynolds’ films are burdened with clunky and sentimental scripts. Films
like Rapa Nui and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves were gorgeously shot and
produced but weighed down by melodrama and hobbled by sentimentality. And then
there was the whole Waterworld debacle from which it seems Reynolds has never
really recovered. The Count of Monte Cristo was a start, but this is the film
that should bring Reynolds back to the table. (I happen to think Waterworld is
fantastically accomplished and enormously entertaining but don’t tell anyone I
said that.)
Tristan & Isolde is, as the ads trumpet, the story of Romeo and Juliet, long
before Romeo and Juliet. It is the primordial love story, set in a Dark Aged
Britain where all men are hirsute and all women are properly bodiced. The plot
concerns the unfortunate romance between Irish princess Isolde (the stunning
Sophia Myles) and glowering Tristan (James Franco). After he is prematurely
pronounced dead and set adrift on a nautical funeral pyre, Tristan washes up on
the wind-blasted coast of Ireland and brought back to life by Isolde. Little
does she know that this handsome and exceptionally coiffed young man has
butchered her unattractive husband to be, the unhuman Wictred (played by the
fittingly named Mark Strong). When Tristan returns home he pines for Isolde but
being a dutiful warrior thinks first of his King and the kingdom. To that end
he journeys back to Ireland to become champion at a “reconciliation”
tournament, the winner acquiring Isolde as a bride. Tristan wins the
competition for his King, the delightfully sympathetic Lord Marke (expertly
portrayed with the utmost sincerity by Rufus Sewell) and promptly spirals into
a gloomy and festering depression when he realizes what he’s done. Isolde is,
of course, not happy being married to the King and thus begins a passionate and
incredibly risky affair. Since things don’t start well, you can imagine how
they end.
Dean Georgaris’ (The Manchurian Candidate, Paycheck) screenplay is dutifully
dramatic; even the most minor of characters are prone to attacks of aphoristic
stuttering. There is also an enumeration of side plots and twists and counter
twists and while they are all wrapped up fine in the end, the going gets a bit
bumpy around the midway mark. Eye rolling may ensue.
But the film succeeds most because Reynolds is a preeminent film craftsman. I
am frequently disillusioned by the lack of well filmed movies at the cineplexes
these days. Most Hollywood productions look incredibly flat, both in color and
lighting, and it’s a marvel to behold a picture that actually has depth on
screen. There is a grit and a substance in Reynolds’ films that hasn’t been
equaled since the '80s. Watching Tristan & Isolde in a purely visual mode is
akin to seeing Blade Runner for the first time. It just looks that good, that
fresh. And no other filmmaker working in Hollywood can capture nature as
magnificently as he can. Reynolds and DP Artur Reinhart create a world that may
not have ever really existed, but it is one that certainly everyone wishes they
could live in. Another captivating, and essential, piece of the production is
Anne Dudley’s (The Crying Game) luminescent score.
Franco is a bit stiff here; he really plays up the tortured soul thing and it
gets annoying. You want to just kick the guy in the ass and tell him to buck
up. But I’ve always felt that way about Romeo and Romeo-ish characters. Myles
is beautiful and she gets to stretch her acting chops in a decidedly more
robust role than Franco’s. But the star here is Sewell, who hasn’t had a really
powerful role since Dark City. David O’Hara, as the pungent Irish king
Donnchadh, is also magnificent.
Tristan & Isolde is one of those rare cinematic experiences that feels whole,
that feels authentic. Well acted and expertly crafted, it is an elegant example
of work by a mainstream filmmaker at the top of his game.
Nice perm, Tristan.
|
Review by Keith Breese
|
View all comments (3) - Comment on this review







