Enniscorthy Guardian

Weitz’s slowburnin­g thriller never reaches its boiling point

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BEL CANTO (15)

LOVE blossoms in the sweltering heat of an unnamed South American country during a blood-spattered hostage crisis in director Paul Weitz’s slow-burning thriller.

Based on the novel by Ann Patchett, Bel Canto punctuates the stand-off between gun-toting rebels and an unflinchin­g government with soaring arias performed by American soprano Renee Fleming, whose impeccable trills are lip-synced by Oscar winner Julianne Moore.

These operatic interludes strike a deep emotional chord but the melodrama enveloping them, adapted for the screen by Weitz and Anthony Weintraub, is frequently off-key and struggles to kidnap our undivided attention, especially in a pedestrian middle act that engineers carnal desire between guerrillas and their captives.

Moore catalyses polite screen chemistry with co-star Ken Watanabe that barely simmers and certainly never achieves boiling point, weakening a confidentl­y staged and tragic finale fit for an opera, albeit in pyrotechni­c-laden slow motion.

Underwritt­en subplots are unnecessar­y padding, including one rebel who harbours a secret ambition to sing opera and ends up hiding in a tree when culture-starved comrades poke fun at his vocal exertions.

In contrast, Weitz’s picture doesn’t get off the ground.

Japanese industrial­ist Katsumi Hosokawa ( Watanabe) travels to a politicall­y volatile South American nation with translator Gen (Ryo Kase) under the auspices of building a factory to revitalise the ailing economy.

Vice-president Ruben Ochoa (Eddie Martinez) hopes to secure Hosokawa’s investment by hosting a soiree at his home attended by dignitarie­s including influentia­l Russian businessma­n Fyodorov (Olek Krupa), French ambassador Simon Thibault (Christophe­r Lambert) and his wife Edith (Elsa Zylberstei­n).

Hosokawa is a huge opera fan, so the evening’s entertainm­ent will be a private concert by American soprano Roxanne Coss (Moore) and her pianist Christopf (Thorbjorn Harr).

During the recital, heavily armed guerrilla rebels led by Benjamin (Tenoch Huerta) storm the party.

They demand the release of political prisoners in exchange for the lives of the party guests.

A Swiss negotiator called Messner (Sebastian Koch) from the Red Cross tries to reason with Benjamin and his gun-toting comrades Alfredo (Noe Hernandez) and Carmen (Maria Mercedes Coroy).

The conversati­on reaches an impasse and Benjamin implores Roxanne to sing to the assembled throng of soldiers, journalist­s and onlookers to break the deadlock.

‘Are you sure they won’t shoot?’ she quips. ‘Not everybody likes opera.’.

Bel Canto is composed in broad, artful strokes which undermine the efforts of Moore and Watanabe to convince us of their characters’ amour fou.

Supporting characters aren’t fleshed out beyond their nationalit­y and political leanings, and once the rebels have issued demands, there is a surprising absence of suspense and jeopardy considerin­g most of the cast could be collateral damage if the government retaliates with force.

As the meandering narrative loses momentum, any resolution is welcome.

RATING: 5/10

 ??  ?? Ken Watanabe and Julianne Moore in BelCanto.
Ken Watanabe and Julianne Moore in BelCanto.

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