San Diego Union-Tribune

LONELY LIFE UPENDED IN ‘AMMONITE’

Winslet, Ronan star in stellar portrait of scientist’s solitude

- BY JUSTIN CHANG Chang writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Some of the most expressive close-ups in “Ammonite,” Francis Lee’s intelligen­t and passionate new drama, are not of faces but hands. They belong to the 19th century English paleontolo­gist Mary Anning (played by Kate Winslet), and they’ve been coarsened by years of hard work and exposure: We notice their roughness when she’s peeling potatoes for a stew, sketching in her notebooks by firelight or scooping up rocks from the beach at Lyme Regis, England, the small Dorset town she calls home. Before long, those same hands will clutch the waist of another woman, Charlotte Murchison (Saoirse Ronan), and pull her close with a raw, tremulous hunger that says more than any whispered endearment­s could. That moment is explosive in its physicalit­y, and it’s entirely of a piece with the rough, overwhelmi­ng physicalit­y of this movie.

Mary is a gruff, stolid woman who treasures her isolation and prefers manual labor to chitchat. She’s like a creature of the earth, a veritable human hermit crab. One of the first things we see her do is climb up the side of a cliff, pry loose a large stone and then go sliding down to the bottom, landing with a hard thud. The stone shatters to reveal a fossilized relic within: an ammonite, an extinct mollusk with a telltale spiral pattern. One of nature’s more bewitching design elements, it’s also a symbol for vertigo, for the dizzying emotional free fall in which Mary will soon find herself.

And “Ammonite,” rough and tactile as it is, doesn’t shy away from abstractio­n or from the metaphoric­al implicatio­ns of Mary’s profession. A self-taught scientist, she runs a tourist shop with her ailing mother, Molly (Gemma Jones), selling seashell trinkets and tchotchkes.

But her real ardor is for digging up large rocks and, with exquisite care and expertise, exposing the beautiful relics within. You could say the movie practices its own brand of emotional paleontolo­gy, excavating Mary’s long-buried secrets and slowly revealing them, layer by fascinatin­g layer.

The chisel being applied is Ronan’s Charlotte, whose arrival in Mary’s life, sometime during the 1840s, initially seems more burden than blessing. Her wealthy husband, Roderick Murchison (an unctuous James McArdle), is an aspiring geologist who has come from London hoping to shadow Mary on one of her fossil hunts; Charlotte, depressed after a miscarriag­e, has been prescribed a regimen of briny sea air and ocean bathing. But Roderick, eager to be temporaril­y rid of his wife, pays Mary to take care of Charlotte for several weeks — a task to which the older woman

reluctantl­y consents, even though she already has another patient, her ailing mother, to look after.

Fortunatel­y, Charlotte improves quickly, thanks in part to a salve that Mary applies with practiced skill. But the truest remedy may well be Mary herself. Despite some initial friction and more than a few desperate tears, Charlotte begins accompanyi­ng her caretaker on her daily excursions to the beach. She helps Mary with her work, which proves fascinatin­g and energizing.

The central problem in “Ammonite” is not easily identified, let alone solved. The obvious difference­s in age, class, personalit­y and physique that separate these two women are also what make them, in many ways, an ideal match. Ronan’s performanc­e grows steadily more luminous as Charlotte’s melancholi­a recedes and her natural vigor and lust for life reemerge. Mary is captivated by that vigor; she also recognizes that it’s at odds with her own dour temperamen­t and her chronic reluctance to let the outside world in.

Although the story is rooted in history, the romantic bond at its heart is largely a matter of interpreti­ve license. While the real Murchison was a close friend of Anning ’s (and eventually became a geologist herself ), it’s unclear whether the two women were lovers. But “Ammonite,” a work of art rather than science or history, has no qualms about departing from the known record — and does so with wit, beauty and a modernism that feels all the more bracing in this Victorian context. It’s telling that, as articulate­d by a woman from Mary’s past (a perfect Fiona Shaw), the main obstacle to the couple’s happiness isn’t neighborho­od gossip or the social stigma of homosexual­ity; it’s Mary herself, her unwillingn­ess to compromise or cede control.

And it’s this insight that reveals “Ammonite” for what it ultimately is: less a sweeping, transcende­nt tale of forbidden love than a wrenching portrait of self-enforced solitude, of a woman who has spent much of her life finding fulfillmen­t in the inanimate. That’s not to suggest that Mary’s relics are devoid of meaning; far from it. The work that we do, the trinkets and treasures that we hold dear, can become important repositori­es of memory, feeling, data and history. A fossil is a record of death. Like a lot of other things — a clasping of hands, a dip in the surf, a lover’s embrace — it can also be evidence of a life well lived.

 ?? NEON ?? Kate Winslet (left) and Saoirse Ronan in “Ammonite,” written and directed by Francis Lee.
NEON Kate Winslet (left) and Saoirse Ronan in “Ammonite,” written and directed by Francis Lee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States