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Overview
Août 1935. Malgré la canicule qui frappe l'Angleterre, la famille Tallis mène une vie insouciante à l'abri dans sa gigantesque demeure victorienne. La jeune Briony a trouvé sa vocation, elle sera romancière. Mais quand du haut de ses treize ans, elle surprend sa sœur aînée Cecilia dans les bras de Robbie, fils de domestique, sa réaction naïve face aux désirs des adultes va provoquer une tragédie et marquer à jamais le destin du jeune homme.
Cast
- James McAvoy as Robbie Turner
- Keira Knightley as Cecilia Tallis
- Saoirse Ronan as Briony Tallis (Age 13)
- Romola Garai as Briony Tallis (Age 18)
- Vanessa Redgrave as Briony Tallis (Age 77)
- Brenda Blethyn as Grace Turner
- Juno Temple as Lola Quincey
- Benedict Cumberbatch as Paul Marshall
- Harriet Walter as Emily Tallis
- Alfie Allen as Danny Hardman
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Reviews
2024-02-09
"Cecilia" (Keira Knightley) has fallen for "Robbie" (James McCoy) - a man well down the social ladder from her family and their stately home. It's love, though, and the young man is doing his best to fit into their privileged world by studying (at their expense) at Cambridge with a view to becoming a doctor. Meantime, following a scene that she has completely misinterpreted and the reading of a letter that wasn't any of her business, their behaviour is being rather unhealthily scrutinised by her thirteen year old sister "Briony" (Saoirse Ronan) who soon becomes fixated on the couple, on destroying the couple and to that latter end she concocts a story that not only achieves her goal, but sees "Robbie" wrongly incarcerated for a fairly heinous crime. The war intervenes and that gives the lovers a chance to recalibrate their feelings for each other whilst the now more mature "Briony" (now Romola Garai) with whom her sister has become estranged, is having a serious crisis of conscience and travels to London to be both a nurse and to take responsibility for her behaviour five years earlier. This is a complex and detailed piece of cinema and McAvoy delivers really well as the honest and decent lad caught up in a web of deceit and envy. Knightley is less effective - but still contributes well enough as the truth is finally known before an inevitable tragedy strikes. It's a story about the ramifications of a lie, but it's also about people's abilities to love, forgive and to judge. Loyalty might only be skin deep but regret lasts for ever, and ever might not be so long as you might hope. Dario Marianelli has created a masterful score to accompany this story and the writing and Joe Wright's subtle direction ensure we steer well clear of the melodramatic and the sentimental as the denouement looms and Vanessa Redgrave appears for a quite fitting final mea culpa. A straightforward British period drama this isn't and it's well worth a watch on big screen for the a cinematography that marries the rustic charm of rural England with the horrors of bombs, bullets and blood poignantly.