THE BOOKSHOP – Review

Florence Green (Emily Mortimer) unpacks books in her shop, in THE BOOKSHOP. Photo courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment ©

At first glance, THE BOOKSTORE might look to some audiences like CHOCOLAT with books instead of chocolates, but this film about a woman who moves to a small town and opens a shop is nothing like that romantic comedy. Other audiences might expect an inspiring tale of a plucky woman, a newcomer facing steep odds but finally winning over skeptical locals. There is indeed a plucky woman and a show of courage and defiance, but the story does work out in the standard stereotypical fashion. The story is inspiring in a different, darker way.

Based on Penelope Fitzgerald’s novel, the story is set in a small English seaside village. But this very English tale is directed by a Spanish – actually Catalan – woman, director Isabel Coixet, who also directed the excellent LEARNING TO DRIVE. Her outsider lens adds a distinct dark twist.

In 1950s Britain, a widow moves to a small English village, buys a old house in town that had stood empty for years, with the intention to open a bookshop. Sounds harmless enough, maybe even something the village would welcome. But Florence Green (Emily Mortimer) does not find it so. It isn’t so much the bookshop that is the problem, although one seemly friendly villager offers her the not-to-encouraging advice that people around there don’t read. Well, the villager admits, there is one reader, the reclusive Mr. Brundish (Bill Nighy) but he never leaves his decaying mansion. No, the real problem,as it turns out, is not lack of readers, but that Florence happened to pick as the spot for her bookshop the very old house that a powerful local aristocrat Violet Gamat (Patricia Clarkson) had her eye on, planning to turn the building that everyone in town calls “the old house” into an “arts center.”

It sets in motion a contest of wills between the plucky widow and the ruthless aristocrat, that sounds very British and indeed the film is based on Penelope Fitzgerald’s semi-autobiographical novel. But the direction and screen adaptation by Catalan director Isabel Coixet brings another element into this story, taking it down some darker and unexpected paths. Class differences and the insular nature of small towns are topics that are woven into this literary tale.

The acting is excellent with Emily Mortimer getting a chance to really shine as the widow determined to stay and make her bookshop succeed. Despite the lack of encouragement, the bookshop does well, bring novels like “Fahrenheit 451” and “Lolita” to the village. Bill Nighy, as always, turns in a fine performance as the book-loving Mr. Brundish, who becomes Florence’s friend, her best ally and customer. The other villagers, while friendly on the surface, are harder to read, particularly a local BBC producer Milo North, a flippant, flirtatious fellow but in an oily way, who proves a slippery factor. A local family sends their young daughter to help in the shop, and the girl and the shop owner bond over tea and books, even though she says she prefers math to reading.

Everything is low-key and emotionally restrained but the director crafts a brilliant and powerful film, one that interjects an element of Kafka and some bone-chilling twists. The result is a film far more complex and interesting than the premise suggests.

THE BOOKSHOP opens Friday, August 31, at the Plaza Frontenac Cinema.

RATING: 4 out of 5 stars

Emily Mortimer And Bill Nighy Star In Trailer For Isabel Coixet’s THE BOOKSHOP – Opening In St. Louis On August 31

Opening on August 24 is director Isabel Coixet’s THE BOOKSHOP. The film will debut in St. Louis on August 31.

England, 1959. Free-spirited widow Florence Green (Emily Mortimer) risks everything to open a bookshop in a conservative East Anglian coastal town. While bringing about a surprising cultural awakening through works by Ray Bradbury and Vladimir Nabokov, she earns the polite but ruthless opposition of a local grand dame (Patricia Clarkson) and the support and affection of a reclusive book loving widower (Bill Nighy).

As Florence’s obstacles amass and bear suspicious signs of a local power struggle, she is forced to ask: is there a place for a bookshop in a town that may not want one?

Based on Penelope Fitzgerald’s acclaimed novel and directed by Isabel Coixet (Learning to Drive), The Bookshop is an elegant yet incisive rendering of personal resolve, tested in the battle for the soul of a community.

Coixet’s resume is quite extensive. Among her many films is 2008’s Elegy. Based on Philip Roth’s novel The Dying Animal, it was shot in Vancouver and produced by Lakeshore Entertainment, with a screenplay by Nicholas Meyer, and starring Penélope Cruz and Ben Kingsley. Elegy was introduced at the 58th Berlin International Film Festival.

In 2012, she shot and produced her project, Yesterday Never Ends which premiered in the Panorama Section of the 63th edition of the Berlin International Film Festival, as well as opening the Málaga Film Festival the same year. That same year she shot Another Me, an English production written and directed by her and with Sophie Turner, Rhys Iphans and Jonathan Rhys Meyers in the cast.

In 2013 she began shooting Leaning to Drive in New York starring Sir Ben Kinglsey and Patricia Clarkson. It premiered at the Toronto Film Festival and won the Grolsch People’s Choice Award.

The director says of the main character, “The balance of this film will lie in the layers of the various skirmishes Florence must get through in her small society. Those skirmishes tally up the battles and those battles make up the war.

As we witness her establishing herself, and the decisions she makes to move forwards, we must also see the wave effect of that drop in the pond and how she affects those around her. And, although Florence does not win the war, she makes an impact on a few people that may or may not have powerful actions to take on in their own futures.

In the end is the sweet dull pain of inevitability. The fires of resistance need oxygen to survive. Water continues to flow and, as mould finds its way into a structure and tears it down, it washes away history. Each side must be vigilant in self-maintenance. The war against Florence results in nothing all that impactful. We are all human again, full “of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” Florence loses her battle, but has she inspired the next generation of warriors? My mission is to show that Florence has indeed inspired us all to take up the good fight.”

LEARNING TO DRIVE – The Review

Credit: Linda Kallerus/Broad Green Pictures

Review by Cate Marquis

Patricia Clarkson and Ben Kingsley give us a pair of well-drawn, likeable characters as a New Yorker learning to drive from a Indian-American driving instructor, in LEARNING TO DRIVE.

LEARNING TO DRIVE is the kind of little film – smart, often funny, thoughtful – for grown-ups seen too little in theaters.  But what really makes this film are the careful crafted, lived-in performances by Kingsley and Clarkson.

A cross-cultural  story about two people driving around might bring “Driving Miss Daisy” to mind, but this film is really nothing like that sentimental tale. Although this story is built around a New Yorker learning to drive, the film is really about taking the wheel of one’s own life, a lesson for both the student and the teacher.

In St. Louis, like most of the country, nearly everyone learns to drive, usually as a teenager. In New York, it is a different case. Many people never learn to drive there, instead using public transportation and cabs. So it takes a certain courage and determination for a middle-aged woman to decide to learn to drive in a culture where not everyone does.

Patricia Clarkson plays Wendy Shields, a successful, well-known book critic whose college professor husband suddenly announces he is leaving her for another woman. Her husband gives her the news at a restaurant, hoping to limit the drama, but when he tries to leave, shocked Wendy jumps in his cab and continues asking him why The cab driver, a South Asian immigrant named Darwan (Kingsley), politely pretends not to hear what is going on in his back seat but he is clearly moved by her heartbroken reaction. The husband asks the cabbie to pull over, gets out and tells the cabbie to drive her home.

The next day, Wendy finds comfort from the couple’s only child Tasha (Grace Gummer), who is home from her college in upstate New York. Tasha wants to be supportive but turns down her mother’s request that she transfer to a university in town. So if Wendy wants to see her, she’ll have to drive there. Which means, she will have to learn to drive. When she calls a driving school, the instructor that shows up at her door is the same cabbie who drove her home, the second of his two jobs.

This film takes a smart, drily witty, literary spin that quashes any drift towards the sentimental. The strength of this charming, warm, often funny film is the appealing characters Clarkson and Kingsley build up. The two actors have great chemistry together and bring a little romantic attraction, never acted on, that gives a little extra boost. A lesser film would make this all about the New Yorker, but this film rounds out both characters.

Because of the cab ride, Darwan understands a little more of what Wendy is going through and as he guides her through the basics of driving, he builds up her confidence for taking control of her own life. Darwan’s calm effortlessness in teaching these dual lessons suggest this is not the first time he has helped a middle-aged New York woman find new self-confidence in driving. However, as the story unfolds, Darwan and Wendy become more like friends, and Darwan learns from Wendy as well as the reverse, as he faces his own life changes.

Darwan lives in Queens, in an apartment he shares with a bunch of other Sikh men, a minority religion in the Indian subcontinent men. Most of his roommates, including his nephew, are not in the country legally but Darwan is a legal resident, granted political asylum to escape persecution for his religion and political beliefs. Back home, he was a professor at a university, here he teaches driving and moonlights driving a cab. An immigration raid scatters his roommates and he finds himself living alone, which prompts him to finally agree to his sister’s plan to find him a wife in their village back in India, an idea he had resisted previously.

Since Sikh men wear turbans, they are often mistaken in this country for Muslims, and the film touches on that fact in one scene. While Wendy copes with her pending divorce, her role in the its end and explores her new life, Darwan gets some help from her about romancing his new wife, who arrives uncertain about adjusting to her new country. The film keeps things light but always intelligent

LEARNING TO DRIVE is a charming little film, with fine performances, appealing characters and nice little message about both friendship and learning something new, no matter your age.

LEARNING TO DRIVE opens Friday, September 4, at Plaza Frontenac Cinema.

OVERALL RATING: 4 OUT OF 5 STARS

 

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Photo Credit: Broad Green Pictures

Patricia Clarkson And Ben Kingsley Talk Isabel Coixet’s LEARNING TO DRIVE In New Featurettes

Credit: Linda Kallerus/Broad Green Pictures
Credit: Linda Kallerus/Broad Green Pictures

Broad Green Pictures has released three new featurettes for director Isabel Coixet’s wonderful film, LEARNING TO DRIVE.

Chosen as the Audience Award runner-up at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and inspired by a true story, LEARNING TO DRIVE stars Academy Award nominee Patricia Clarkson and Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley in a feel-good comedy about an improbable friendship.

Wendy is a fiery Manhattan author whose husband has just left her for a younger woman; Darwan is a soft-spoken taxi driver from India on the verge of an arranged marriage. As Wendy sets out to reclaim her independence, she runs into a barrier common to many lifelong New Yorkers: she’s never learned to drive. When Wendy hires Darwan to teach her, her unraveling life and his calm restraint seem like an awkward fit. But as he shows her how to take control of the wheel, and she coaches him on how to impress a woman, their unlikely friendship awakens them to the joy, humor, and love in starting life anew. (trailer)

Of special note – the movie is edited by triple Oscar-winning editor Thelma Schoonmaker.

For Schoonmaker, the film served as a reunion of sorts. Schoonmaker explains, “Having had the wonderful experience of editing Sir Ben Kingsley’s performance in two Scorsese movies, Shutter Island and Hugo, and also having had the same wonderful experience editing Patricia Clarkson’s performance in Shutter Island, it was a delightful surprise to discover how much humor both of them brought to their parts in Learning to Drive, and how Sir Ben’s stillness and quiet dignity as a Sikh was the perfect foil for Patricia’s highly emotional and wonderfully courageous performance as Wendy. They were magical together and enormous fun to edit.”

LEARNING TO DRIVE

This delightful, independent film is playing in select theaters now and opens in St. Louis on Friday September 4.

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Penelope Cruz and Diane Kruger In Final Negotiations to Star in THIS MAN, THIS WOMAN

86th Oscars, Arrivals

Oscar winner Penelope Cruz (VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA, PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES) and Diane Kruger (INGLORIOUS BASTERDS, NATIONAL TREASURE) are in final negotiations to star in the romance feature film THIS MAN, THIS WOMAN, to be directed by Isabel Coixet whose new film NOBODY WANTS THE NIGHT opens the 2015 Berlin International Film Festival, it was announced today by Fortitude International co-founders, Nadine de Barros and Robert Ogden Barnum, and producer Mike Lobell (THE FRESHMAN, STRIPTEASE).

Fortitude International is financing the film and will handle foreign sales on the project being introduced to buyers at the European Film Market in Berlin next month.

De Barros and Barnum serve as executive producers. Lobell is producing the film.

The romance is written by Oscar winner Frederic Raphael (EYES WIDE SHUT, DARLING, TWO FOR THE ROAD).

CAA is representing domestic rights.

An estranged man, Matt Heller, and a woman, Martha Parks (Cruz) encounter each other by chance on a plane, and relive memories of their turbulent romantic relationship.

Kruger will play Kirsty Sachs, a talk show host who has an affair with Heller and changes the course of his whirlwind relationship with Parks.

“It feels like a minor miracle to finally bring this passion of mine to the screen and to put together this dream cast including the superbly talented Penelope Cruz and Diane Kruger who are the perfect actresses to bring these multi-layered characters to life. Combined with an extraordinary director to help realize Freddie’s amazing script, there must be a movie God after all, “said Lobell.

“Frederic Raphael has written a mesmerizing script which closely examines a couple’s rollercoaster relationship over the years which will be brilliantly brought to life by the talented filmmaker Isabel Coixet.  We can’t wait to introduce this hot title to buyers at EFM,” said de Barros and Barnum.

Penelope Cruz won the Oscar for her supporting role in Woody Allen’s VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA co-starring Javier Bardem and Scarlett Johansson and was nominated for Rob Marshall’s NINE. She will appear on screen this summer in Columbia Pictures’ comedy GRIMSBY with Sacha Baron Cohen, Mark Strong and Isla Fisher. Her credits Disney’s global phenomenon PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES co-starring Johnny Depp, Pedro Almodovar’s VOLVER, VANILLA SKY and Coixet’s ELEGY.

Diane Kruger received critical recognition for her performance in Quentin Tarantino’s INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS, for which she shared a SAG Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. She will next be seen in Gabriele Muccino’s FATHERS AND DAUGTHERS, co-starring Russell Crowe, Amanda Seyfried and Aaron Paul. She has starred opposite Nicolas Cage in the successful NATIONAL TREASURE franchise and was on screen with Liam Neeson in the action thriller UNKNOWN. Her other credits include THE BETTER ANGELS, FAREWELL, MY QUEEN and THE HOST.

Diane-Kruger

Spanish filmmaker Isabel Coixet’s next film, NOBODY WANTS THE NIGHT starring Juliette Binoche, will open the 2015 Berlin International Film Festival next month, marking the seventh time one of her films will premiere at the festival. Her other films include LEARNING TO DRIVE starring Patricia Clarkson and Ben Kingsley which premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival, ELEGY also starring Cruz and Kingsley and MY LIFE WITHOUT ME starring Sarah Polley, Amanda Plummer Scott Speedman and Mark Ruffalo.

Mike Lobell has produced a series of iconic films during his long and distinguished career including THE FRESHMAN with the legendary Marlon Brando, TWO FOR THE ROAD with Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney, the worldwide hit STRIPTEASE starring Demi Moore and Randal Kleiser’s WHITE FANG with Ethan Hawke and Seymour Cassel. His other credits include CHANCES ARE starring Cybill Shepherd and Robert Downey Jr., THE JOURNEY OF NATTY GANN starring Meredith Salenger and John Cusack, IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU with Oscar winner Nicolas Cage and Bridget Fonda and Andrew Bergman’s HONEYMOON IN VEGAS with Cage and Sarah Jessica Parker.

Cruz is repped by CAA and Untitled Entertainment and Kruger by UTA and Untitled Entertainment.