Call & Times

‘Darkest Hour’ shines

Winston Churchill biopic gives new perspectiv­e

- By ANN HORNADAY

Until this year, perhaps the greatest piece of moviemakin­g about Dunkirk was only part of a movie: It was a breathtaki­ng sequence of the massive World War II evacuation, filmed in one astonishin­g five-minute take that dramatical­ly punctuated the movie "Atonement," directed by Joe Wright.

Now Wright returns with a fully fledged Dunkirk film: "Darkest Hour" is already receiving awards chatter for Gary Oldman's deliciousl­y crafty portrayal of the film's main subject, a newly minted British prime minister named Winston Churchill. But this isn't just film-as-backdrop for a towering central performanc­e. Wright brings his signature good taste – including sumptuous, jewel-box sets and elegantly staged set pieces

– to an enterprise in which Oldman's hugely enjoyable star turn is equaled by similarly well-judged performanc­es from Kristin Scott Thomas and Ben Mendelsohn.

Handsomely filmed, intelligen­tly written, accented with just a dash of outright hokum, "Darkest Hour" ends a year already laden with terrific films about the same subject – including the winsome comedy-drama "Their Finest" and Christophe­r Nolan's boldly visual interpreti­ve history "Dunkirk" – and ties it up with a big, crowd-pleasing bow.

"Darkest Hour" begins in May 1940, when the war is already underway in Europe, accommodat­ionist forces still hold sway in Britain, and German troops have taken France, setting their sights on the island across the English Channel. When Prime Minister Neville Chamberlai­n is forced to resign, the vagrant winds of fortune blow in Churchill's general direction: Although he has recently been in the "wilderness" after a disastrous political career, he's deemed the most acceptable choice among flawed contenders.

"It's not a gift," he says grumpily when the PM position is dangled before him. "It's revenge."

Following the template of the most riveting biopics, screenwrit­er Anthony McCarten eschews the soup-to-nuts Wikipedia approach, instead drilling down into the period that would shape Churchill into the iconic figure whose high-toned comportmen­t and rhetoric seem like dimly remembered dreams today. "Darkest Hour" features many of the humorous Churchill-isms that make him enduringly beloved: the cigar, the long baths, the love of champagne, the cuddly-curmudgeon wit.

But it also gets to the canny, self-aware operator beneath the avuncular surface: When he broadcasts his first big speech, his actorly instincts take over, and it's clear he's a natural who's best on his feet and under pressure.

Handsomely filmed, intelligen­tly written, accented with just a dash of outright hokum, “Darkest Hour” ends a year already laden with terrific films about the same subject, and ties it up with a big, crowd-pleasing bow.

 ??  ??
 ?? Jack English/Focus Features ?? Lily James stars as secretary Elizabeth Layton and Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill in "Darkest Hour."
Jack English/Focus Features Lily James stars as secretary Elizabeth Layton and Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill in "Darkest Hour."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States