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Bright Star

movies|bright%20star|2009-12-26
The film explores the three-year romance between Romantic poet John Keats and his lover Fanny Browne, which was slightly curtailed by Keats' death.

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Editorial


Writer-director Jane Campion's most famous film remains 1993's Oscar-winning The Piano, the story of a woman unable to speak, trapped in a silent world until an unlikely paramour unlocks her emotionally and erotically.

In Bright Star, Campion takes as her subject John Keats (played by Ben Whishaw), one of the most famous wordsmiths of all time. Ostensibly her subjects couldn't be more different. Yet, for all his way with words, once again it takes an unlikely paramour — flirty, feisty seamstress Fanny Brawne — to lay bare the passion behind the poet.

Campion has taken as her focus the last two years of 23-year-old Keats's life, as he teetered on the edge of literary fame. Lodging in London with the rambunctious Charles Brown (the excellent Paul Schneider), his buxom, rosy-cheeked neighbour, Fanny Brawne (Abbie Cornish), soon catches his (and Brown's) eye, not least as she isn't afraid to speak her mind about his poems. Or, indeed, anything.

It's a fun, familiar set-up, all too soon blighted by Keats's obvious illness, our romantic hero conspicuously succumbing to something nasty even as, thanks to Brawne, his life is filling with love. Campion seems to suggest that if sheer force of personality were enough, TB would be no match for Fanny.

This might be the turn of the 19th Century, but Campion's is no creaky costume drama — indeed, Fanny's bosoms are barely restrained by her succession of self-designed frocks. Yet, as another great poet once wrote, the course of true love never did run smooth. Just as this simple passion finds its voice, a different note begins to sound. Campion's pacing is immaculate, and her mixing of light and shade is so subtly effective that, as the tale heads towards inevitable tragedy, it's impossible not to be left both quietly devastated and thoroughly uplifted.

Liz Beardsworth

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3 User reviews (add yours)

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Janet
January 12, 2010


Brilliant!

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Barbara
January 17, 2010


Overacted and undercooked.

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Sam
January 29, 2010


Tedious. I knew it wasn't an action film, but God! I was desperate for Keats to die so I could go home. Fanny was a brat and I felt sorry for her family. The best character was Charles Brown.

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