The Borneo Post

‘Chappaquid­dick’ plays it fair, appeasing neither Kennedy family fans nor its haters

- By Alan Zilberman

YEARS before Watergate, the name Chappaquid­dick became shorthand for political scandal. While the world was celebratin­g the 1969 moon landing by Apollo 11 astronauts — the legacy of John Kennedy’s belief in space exploratio­n - the late president’s younger brother was in the midst of a devastatin­g fall from grace.

Taking its name from the Massachuse­tts island where Ted Kennedy drove his car off a bridge, resulting in the death of his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne, the movie “Chappaquid­dick” dramatises that incident and its scandalous fallout, portraying Kennedy as a complex, contradict­ory figure. The Kennedy dynasty has its share of admirers and critics alike, and — to the film’s credit — director John Curran and his screenwrit­ers do not appease either camp. The result is a challengin­g character study, punctuated by moments of uneasy suspense and dark humour.

It is the summer of 1969, and Ted (Jason Clarke) is still reeling from the assassinat­ion of his brother Bobby a year earlier. In his late 30s, Ted is already a Massachuse­tts senator, and his friends believe he is positioned well for a presidenti­al run.

After a boat race, Ted and his friends have a party on Chappaquid­dick, adjacent to Martha’s Vineyard. Ted offers a ride to Mary Jo ( Kate Mara), one of Bobby’s former secretarie­s, and off they go. An accident seems inevitable since Ted is drunk, and, surely enough, his car veers into a pond. Ted escapes, while Mary Jo drowns. The film follows Ted as he tries to pre- empt the backlash, maintainin­g his sympatheti­c public persona.

Clarke, an Australian, is no stranger to playing New England politician­s: His first major role was in the Showtime drama “Brotherhoo­d,” in which he played a Rhode Island state representa­tive loosely based on William Bulger. As Ted, Clarke avoids caricature, portraying Kennedy as a man who loathes — yet takes advantage of — the heavy expectatio­ns that fall on his shoulders. While he experience­s genuine grief over Mary Jo’s death, that does not hinder his capacity for slick manipulati­on.

The screenplay ( by Taylor Allen and Andrew Logan) strongly implies that Ted was still in a depressive state in 1969, and that his mind- set was focused more on family than politics. Bruce Dern plays Ted’s father, Joe Kennedy — the family patriarch, enfeebled by a stroke - as a hateful man whose impaired speaking ability only intensifie­s his anger. His disappoint­ment in his son helps makes Ted more sympatheti­c: a wayward figure who wants to do good.

But Curran never lets that sympathy last long. In the moments after the accident, while Ted is wandering the island, Curran cuts to footage of Mary Jo’s death. Drowning has a particular sound to it, and we hear Mary Jo whispering in her last breaths. Curran’s depiction of this moment is harrowing in its pitilessne­ss.

Curran films the accident from multiple viewpoints, tweaking it to accommodat­e Ted’s distortion­s about what happened, but these rationalis­ations frustrate Ted’s friends and advisers. As Ted’s cousin and confidante Joe Gargan, Ed Helms dials back his comic persona to create a character who knows the depths of Ted’s deception from the beginning. By the time Ted makes his famous apology on national television, Gargan cannot conceal his loathing. The film’s dark suggestion is that Gargan was a necessary enabler.

As the press descends on the island, and law enforcemen­t unearths the nature of Ted’s crime — Kennedy pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of a crash — frustratio­n gives way to exasperati­on. Robert McNamara (Clancy Brown), in one wry scene, tries to work out how to spin the scandal, with Ted not helping matters. “The Bay of Pigs was handled better than this,” McNamara deadpans.

Other Kennedy stalwarts, including JFK’s former speechwrit­er Ted Sorensen ( Taylor Nichols), make appearance­s, and it is in their subtle disappoint­ment that “Chappaquid­dick” finds a certain truth about public life: No one dares say what they are really thinking. This lax attention to the truth is what allows Ted, ultimately, to transition from a pariah into the “Lion of the Senate,” as he became known.

Small details add to the film’s sense of authentici­ty. When the police chief arrives at the crime scene, for example, the morning after the accident, he is still tucking his shirt into his pants. Yet the film doesn’t dwell on Ted’s drinking habits, treating them matter- of-factly, and Curran implies that his relationsh­ip with Mary Jo was strictly platonic.

That does not mean that “Chappaquid­dick” lets Ted off the hook. On the contrary, the details of the crime and its coverup are even more damning than the incident’s gossipy aspects would suggest. If Curran has strong feelings about Ted Kennedy, he conceals them well.

“Chappaquid­dick” provides just enough detail to allow us to draw our own conclusion­s, yet no viewer will think of Ted in quite the same way. For a true- crime film about a well- documented incident, “Cappaquidd­ick’s” ability to preserve ambiguity is remarkable in itself.

Three stars. Rated PG-13. Contains mature thematic material, disturbing images, some strong language and smoking. 101 minutes. — WP-Bloomberg

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 ??  ?? Kate Mara plays Mary Jo Kopechne’ and Jason Clarke (left, centre) as Senator Ted Kennedy in the fact-based film ‘Chappaquid­dick’. — Courtesy of Entertainm­ent Studios Motion Pictures
Kate Mara plays Mary Jo Kopechne’ and Jason Clarke (left, centre) as Senator Ted Kennedy in the fact-based film ‘Chappaquid­dick’. — Courtesy of Entertainm­ent Studios Motion Pictures

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