National Post

Their Finest

- Chris Knight Their Finest opens April 14 in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, and wider on April 21.

If you’re curious about Christophe­r Nolan’s upcoming movie Dunkirk but not certain you can handle the brutality of his take on the Second World War, here’s a jolly good way to ease into the subject.

Lone Scherfig, a Danish director who’s very much at home in Britain ( see An Education, One Day, The Riot Club), has taken Lissa Evans’ 2009 novel Their Finest Hour and a Half and made a longer film with a shorter title. As it opens, Catrin Cole ( Gemma Arterton) is working in London as an advertisin­g copywriter when her way with words comes to the attention of the Ministry of Informatio­n.

She also gets noticed by Tom Buckley ( Sam Claflin), after she’s hired to help write the screenplay f or a propaganda film about the evacuation of Dunkirk. ( The 1940 operation rescued more than 300,000 Allied troops who had been s t randed behind enemy lines in France.)

The film is meant to both bolster British morale and help convince the U. S. to enter the war — hence the inclusion of an improbable American character, played by Carl Lundbeck ( a pretty, terrible actor), played in turn by Jake Lacy ( a handsome good one). Catrin’s job is to write the “slop,” or women’s dialogue; a nice bit of irony when you consider that the director of Their Finest, the novel’s author and the screenwrit­er ( Gaby Chiappe) are all female.

The film within the film also stars a past- his- prime actor played by Bill Nighy, who does doddering so well it’s a surprise to find he’s not yet 70. He is worth the price of admission, if only for the scene in which he utters the words “semolina pudding” in a way that makes it sound like the film should have an R rating. ( It is in fact 14A, though any milder and it would fall into PG territory.)

But the main story here is the slowly budding romance between Tom and Catrin, complicate­d somewhat by the fact that she has a coldfish husband. (And for sociolingu­ists by her sometimes wavering Welsh accent.) Don’t worry; the Luftwaffe doesn’t drop a thousandpo­under on him, although the way the movie deals with him is almost as efficient.

“Authentici­ty and optimism” is the motto of the propaganda department, and Their Finest takes a similar tack. So we get a couple of scenes of death and devastatio­n to remind us that this is England during the Blitz, after all. But for the most part it’s a sanitized war, shot in army green and nostalgic sepia tones, in which most problems can be solved with a cup of tea.

The result is a sometimes bloodless picture, emotionall­y as well as physically, but it’s clear that this is just what the director ordered. Scherfig is looking to make a forgettabl­e light- hearted comedy- romance, and in that respect she has succeeded. If you want something grittier, there’s always Dunkirk. ∂∂½ CATRIN’S JOB IS TO WRITE THE ‘SLOP,’ OR WOMEN’S DIALOGUE.

 ?? NICOLA DOVE ?? Sam Clafin and Gemma Arterton star in Danish director Lone Scherfig’s Their Finest, a lightheart­ed look at a British propaganda effort during the Second World War.
NICOLA DOVE Sam Clafin and Gemma Arterton star in Danish director Lone Scherfig’s Their Finest, a lightheart­ed look at a British propaganda effort during the Second World War.

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