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‘Lost City of Z’ enchants

The period film tells the true story of British explorer Percy Fawcett who journeyed into the depths of the Amazon at the dawn of the 20th century

- Photos courtesy of Amazon Studios —AP

M o dest and majestic at once, the films of James Gray patiently burrow their way into the souls of their characters and, maybe, into you. Gray is painterly and exacting — some might say to a fault. But his movies’ revelation­s are complex and contradict­ory — full of life’s messiness — and their formal textures break open with moments of transcende­nce.

So, yeah, I like them — particular­ly his last one, The Immigrant, and his new one,

The Lost City of Z. Both are period films with a pulse and a now-ness the genre often lacks. Each plunges us into the passages of early 20th century strivers and leaves us with a shattering final image of departure. Like the tide, they overwhelm and then recede.

“He’s been rather unfortunat­e in his choice of ancestors,” is how one character explains Percy Fawcett’s predicamen­t early in The Lost City of Z, based on David Grann’s nonfiction book. Fawcett (Charlie Hunnam) is a British officer but decoration has eluded him, and his deceased, disgraced father has soiled his name.

Though craving action, he’s assigned in 1906 on a map-making mission to the “blank spaces” of Bolivia where the British are meant to act as “referees” in a territory dispute with Brazil. The expedition into the Amazon jungles soon fills him with a romantic sense of exploratio­n (his wife, Nina, played by Sienna Miller, reads him Kipling’s The Explorer), and he travels across the Atlantic in search of glory and redemption. Success, he’s told, would change his lot “considerab­ly.”

On the boat to South America, Fawcett meets his aide-de-camp, Henry Costin (an excellent, heavily bearded Robert Pat- tinson), who initially eyes his leader warily. “You might be a little too English for this jungle,” he says as they step through flies and snakes.

They and their small team travel up a river and it immediatel­y feels as though

The Lost City of Z has swum into the currents of Werner Herzog’s Aguirre, the

Wrath of God and Fitzcarral­do and Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now. The ominous notes are many: a glassy-eyed rubber baron (Franco Nero) whose business the British are there to protect; a native guide who warns that the river “is always danger”; the onset of hunger among the thinning crew. But while Fawcett’s journey is gruelling and frightful, he finds not madness in the jungle but wonder. His grandiose notions aren’t humbled in the Amazon, they’re elevated. Gray’s camera, too, stays composed, and he leads his epic in a more sprawling direction.

Fawcett believed that he found deep in the Amazon evidence of an ancient civilisati­on. Upon his return to London, he’s hailed as a hero. But his claim of a lost city and a civilisati­on older than England’s is mocked. He’s urged not to raise the stature of “the savage.”

SWELLING AMBITIONS

The jungle becomes Fawcett’s compulsion, and, to the detriment of all else, he swells with ambition. It’s a huge step up for the magnetic Hunnam, who neverthele­ss struggles to find much but wide-eyed idealism behind Fawcett’s adventurin­g. More trips follow, as does the First World War, but the tension that moves to the fore in The Lost City of Z is over the sacrifices necessitat­ed by his dreams. With every journey taking years, he’s a stranger to his children. (Future “Spider-man” Tom Holland pivotally plays the eldest son Jack).

It isn’t just Fawcett’s sacrifices, either. Nina might have the appearance and size of a traditiona­l secondary spouse role, but she’s beautifull­y performed by Miller as a proudly independen­t woman left to raise their children alone. Her own aspiration­s are obliterate­d. Colonialis­m is embedded in Fawcett’s story, but Gray has keenly sought out its quieter, unsung tragedies. The Lost City of Z may, like early films by Gray, leave some thirsting for more swashbuckl­ing adventure. But if you let the ebb and flow of the Fawcetts’ lives drift over you, the movie is a wellspring.

 ?? Robert Pattinson as Henry Costin in ‘The Lost City of Z’. ??
Robert Pattinson as Henry Costin in ‘The Lost City of Z’.
 ?? Charlie Hunnam as Percy Fawcett in ‘The Lost City of Z’. ??
Charlie Hunnam as Percy Fawcett in ‘The Lost City of Z’.

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