Before I Go to Sleep
Dir: Rowan
Joffé
2014
**
Based on S.J. Watson's bestselling 2011 novel of
the same name, Rowan Joffé's film wasn't quite the hit adaptation. For good
reason. I haven't read the book but, as I understand it, little was changed
other than the fact the main character keeps a video diary in the film instead
of the traditional written diary as seen in the book. I'm guessing that the
narrative is helped a lot by the inclusion of the written diary, in the film it
is more of an afterthought. It's never easy to adapt a book into a visual feature
film but without even reading the book, Joffé's version falls at all of the
important hurdles. It seems that the locations were more important than the
plot itself but the visuals still don't make up for the lack of intrigue,
suspense or thrill. The stories big plot twist is far from being a big plot
twist, there was only ever the option of two different endings and it was the
one I guessed right at the beginning of the film. I can only imagine how
brilliant it would have been reading it. Not only is the story a little cliché
now compared to most modern thrillers but so too was the style of acting and
the clinically stale way the movie is filmed. Everything is muted, the colour,
the script, the set, everything. Everything is modern 50's, the colours are
light blue and deep green with the occasion walnut finish. The compositions are
fantastic, except they are straight out of the Alfred Hitchcock book of film
making, nothing new and not even that well done. Mark Strong is given very
little to work with, Colin Firth is miscast and Nicole Kidman is particularly
lethargic. She glances, she whispers and that is about it. Utterly
unconvincing, full of plot holes and simplistic to the point of silly. The good
news for everyone involved is that it is so forgettable no one will remember to
hold it against them.
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