Vanity Fair Movie Review
Vanity Fair Review

"Vanity Fair" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Mira NairProducer : Lydia Dean Pilcher,Janette Day,Donna Gigliotti
Screenwiter : Julian Fellowes,Mark Skeet,Matthew Faulk
Starring : Reese Witherspoon,Jim Broadbent,Eileen Atkins,Jonathan Rhys Meyers,Rhys Ifans,Gabriel Byrne,Bob Hoskins
Mira Nair has groomed her sumptuous adaptation of William Makepeace Thackeray’s
novel Vanity Fair for Oscar contention, and the period epic easily could
compete in a number of technical categories. Pencil the handsome film down for
costume design, art direction, and makeup nominations. Declan Quinn’s
cinematography certainly deserves a nod, too. It’s a little early to tell how
all the races will shake out, but leading lady Reese Witherspoon could even
surprise a few people by seeing her name on a short list of Best Actress
nominees.
Too bad no one is going to pay to see the film. Most mainstream filmgoers would
opt for root canal over having to sit through a 19th century social commentary
piece. Take Ang Lee’s Sense And Sensibility as an example. It earned seven
Oscar nominations back in 1995, but only grossed $42 million in the States.
Which is unfortunate, because there’s plenty to enjoy in Fair, starting with
Witherspoon’s multifaceted turn as Becky Sharp. The orphaned daughter of a
starving artist, she manipulates the hearts of decent men to climb London’s
social ladders. At a time when class status means everything, Becky lives well
above her means but manages to stay in society’s good graces through some
well-placed applications of observant wit, sarcastic humor and irresistible
charm. She befriends impressionable Amelia (Romola Garai), marries into the
respectable Crawley family, and eventually catches the eye of a wealthy suitor
in the Marquis of Steyne (Gabriel Byrne).
Becky’s a demanding role, yet Witherspoon seems comfortable operating on either
end of the communal food chain – her character must go from destitute to
privileged and back again over the course of the film’s 2 hour and 20 minute
runtime. Nair peppers Becky’s journey with light and lively comedic touches,
and even injects a distinct Indian flair that supplements the accessible
screenplay. The tasty Fair script, credited to three different writers,
maintains an unexpected conversational tone and is seasoned with bitter games
of social manipulation.
The challenge comes in condensing Thackeray's 800-page novel into a workable
story, and Nair does an admirable job juggling character arcs and managing her
film's flow. A scorecard’s almost necessary to keep the Crawley’s separate from
the other families of the age. There's still enough to trim, especially in
Becky’s final bid for wealth and status that occupies the film’s final act and
turns Byrne into a lecherous old cad. But if the class struggles of the
corseted clans are your thing, then Fair is a decently-acted and good looking
film that’s worth your time and money.
The DVD includes commentary from Nair, deleted scenes, and two
behind-the-scenes featurettes.
Prepare the bonfires!
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell



