Review of Sunshine

Sunshine (1999)
5/10
Beautiful Looking Didactic View of History
8 October 2005
During the almost 3 hours of "Sunshine" I had plenty of time to think about how Ralph Fiennes seems to be made to make period pictures unlike say Harvey Keitel and Kevin Costner who were wincible in theirs.

Fiennes bares all for penance for his "Schindler's List" character in this lavish look at 3 generations of a Jewish family in Hungary as they try to assimilate vs. never-ending anti-Semitism. Fiennes plays all 3 generations of males in the family as they accommodate with imperialism, fascism and communism-- and gee not once does anyone say "You look so much like your father!", though the all senior citizen audience guffawed by his 3rd appearance. But then they also guffawed that all the repetitive sex is the same through the century, lustful attacks on the sly with much frantic clothes removal, and unflattering camera angles up the nose.

Tony-nommed mother and daughter team Jennifer Ehle and Rosemary Harris breathe tremendous life into the movie as the younger and older self of a fulcrum character, which Fiennes did less often because his characters were so repressed. I'm not sure if it was intentional that each of the 3 generations had the same personality so that the viewer tells them apart by their facial hair and costumes (well, when he's wearing clothes).

In more ways than one this reminded me of "The Marriage of Maria Braun," a bitingly satirical German film that made similar points with humor on the same theme as "Meet the New Boss, same as the Old Boss."

The script, co-written by the director and Israel Horowitz, I assume the playwright, is too didactic in making its points, but the philosophical decision points it focuses on in history are interesting, trying to identify when and about what people should take a stand or go along.

The look is even beyond Merchant/Ivory retro feasts, absolutely beautiful settings, costumes, a visual feast. For example, a scene from the 1936 Olympics mingles newsreel film with ersatz recreated newsreel film and new color scenes as the camera follows the crowds in Nazi uniforms.

I stayed through all the credits but the locations weren't identified -- where is that sumptuous Ministry of "Justice"? (originally written 6/25/2000)
9 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed