Daily Express

Jurassic lark

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‘‘ Anning was a dinosaur expert but the focus here is on a fictional lesbian affair

AMMONITE Cert 15 ★★★ On digital now

Not everyone has heard of Mary Anning but she has set tongues wagging since the 19th century. The ground-breaking palaeontol­ogist and Dorset fossil seller is said to have inspired the classic tongue twister “She sells seashells by the seashore”.

But there was a lot more to this remarkable figure. As a protestant Dissenter and working-class woman, Anning was denied access to a formal education. But through a combinatio­n of intelligen­ce, hard work and (I imagine) sheer bloody-mindedness, she became the leading dinosaur expert of her age.

A rousing biopic is well overdue. Sadly, Ammonite isn’t it. Instead of focusing on her breaking of boundaries, director Francis Lee dramatises a tortured and entirely made-up lesbian affair with her friend and fellow fossil hunter Charlotte Murchison.

In this drama of forbidden passions, a depressed, middle-aged Anning (Kate Winslet) is eking out a dreary existence on what is now called the Jurassic Coast.

The peak of her fame is behind her when a London scientist wanders into her Lyme Regis fossil shop. Instead of seeking her expert advice, he offers her a job caring for his wife Charlotte (Saoirse Ronan), hoping that early morning exertions on the beach will cure her “melancholi­a”. Slowly, a fractious partnershi­p gives way to the frantic ripping of corsets.

Winslet is excellent and Lee shoots the Dorset coast with flair. And I get his point about poetic licence – why should we assume all historical figures were straight? But do unmarried women, no matter their achievemen­ts, have to be tragic? This story could have soared but, instead, it gets bogged down in a sad and disappoint­ingly familiar domestic drama.

 ??  ?? SHELL SHOCK Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan as imagined lovers
SHELL SHOCK Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan as imagined lovers

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