See Alicia Vikander before she was famous, Dominic West in his authentic accent, and Emily Watson being stellar as always in increasingly diminished roles.
Vera Brittain was a real-life independent spirit. She vied for and won a spot at Oxford and vowed “never to marry”, even if those sounded like famous last word when uttered just as a very cute boy enters the picture. Turns out, he has a thing for sharp and feisty young women, and the two are a love match and plan to be at Oxford at the same time (unchaperoned, even). But every great love story needs an obstacle and feminism wasn’t enough, so along came The Great War to shake things up.
Tag line: Divided by war. United by love. Did you just puke a little in your mouth?
Luckily the tagline writer was an aberration and the film itself is quite good. Vera’s mind expands and excels at Oxford, and no one is less grateful for her education than she. Women still have to prove themselves worthy of degrees and now she’s feeling left behind again, when her brother, her friends, and her love are all leaving for the front. But Vera’s not one to take a back seat – soon she’s giving up her beloved school to become a nurse.
Vikander (who replaced Saoirse Ronan) is every bit the revelation that Ex Machina proved she was. She’s poised and luminous, and while the movie doesn’t contribute much that is new to the war genre, Vikander makes it more than worth a look.
Her The Danish Girl co-star, Eddie Redmayne, also starred in his own WW1 epic, called Birdsong (based on the Faulks of the same name). He plays a young man who goes off to war remembering the affair he had with his French (married) sweetheart. Clemence Poesy is beautiful as ever, but this one may leave you feeling faintly unsatisfied.
I loved the novel Birdsong, I’m disappointed that the movie doesn’t hold up.
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Me too 😕
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Now two movies I need to see her in – still have yet to see the Danish Girl.
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I expected the movie to be quite a romantic drama (I don’t think I’ve seen the trailer) and it wasn’t, but I still liked it. Vikander was great, although I preferred her here rather than in Danish Girl.
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I saw this movie last year and really liked it and I thought Vikander played her part very well. I can’t compare it to the book, though, as I haven’t read it.
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This sounds like a good movie actually. There may be issues but it is worth checking out
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I haven’t seen a good war story since The Railway Man with Colin Firth. If this one comes around here I’ll have to have a go at it.
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