The Guardian (USA)

Hugh Grant's Undoing: how romcom leading men embraced the dark side

- Alex Hess

Hugh Grant made his name in the 90s as a squeaky-clean charmer, but anyone who has been keeping tabs on his career will not have been surprised to see him show up in the HBO miniseries The Undoing as an unhinged philandere­r, attacking a man with his bare teeth in a prison-yard brawl. For a while now, the actor who used to warm our hearts has been doing his best to chill our blood. And he has been doing it pretty well: as a scheming politician in A Very English Scandal, as a scheming investigat­or in The Gentlemen and, best of all, as a scheming theatre impresario in Paddington 2. As mid-career renewals go, Grant’s has been one of the best and The Undoing, six hours of topnotch trash that wraps up tonight, has made the most of its newly depraved star.

The reinventio­n of the romantic lead is hardly a new phenomenon – it is more than 75 years since Murder, My Sweet turned Dick Powell from a freshfaced musical star to a whisky-addled noir antihero, but in recent years it has become an especially popular trope. Richard Gere, who, like Grant, found screen stardom by flirting faux-modestly with flattered young ladies, has lately gone to great pains to show off his ugly side. He forged a career from playing wealthy, winsome suitors, but his recent turns as a hedge-fund magnate (Arbitrage), a moneyed philanthro­pist ( The Benefactor), a high-flying politician (The Dinner) and a Murdochesq­ue media mogul (MotherFath­erSon) have all helped to flip the twinkly-eyed archetype on its head. Gere’s message is clear: I’m not the white knight you all thought I was.

Matthew McConaughe­y’s muchtrumpe­ted career revival hinged on a similar embrace of his dark side, while the lure of evil was strong enough to transform Vince Vaughn from the affable man-child of The Break-Up into the limb-snapping lunatic of Brawl in Cell Block 99 and Dragged Across Concrete.

Deliberate­ly or not, this mass-reinventio­n of Hollywood lover boys offers a neat reflection of how public life has changed since their 90s and 00s heydays. A fair few of the romantic gambits attempted then (an arse-squeeze in a crowded lift, intimate messages via an online alter ego) are now more courtcase than courtly. But if all that cheery prosperity and iffy gender politics was simply a reflection of its time, the years since – with the banking crash, the Harvey Weinstein revelation­s and spiralling social inequality – have delivered some harsh lessons in just what those films got wrong.

Their male stars have leveraged this cultural upheaval – and their own screen personas – with good results, as well as a taste for topicality. Gere, whose high-flying, sex-buying business exec in Pretty Woman was once Hollywood’s idea of the dream bachelor, has spent the past decade demonstrat­ing the moral bankruptcy of the super-rich. Grant used his role in A Very English Scandal to show how a facade of bumbling charm can be the perfect foil for cut-throat political careerism. In The Undoing, his grubby affair with a naive young murder victim-in-waiting makes you worry for the fate of Martine McCutcheon’s character in Love Actually.

The strategy has been clear: out with the charm, in with the smarm. But this career-shift is also a reflection of the roles available to A-list movie stars as they inch into middle-age. Half of them, anyway: it is worth noting that the former sweetheart­s of Grant, Gere et al have had to take different paths to remain at the top, or else risk disappeari­ng. Julia Roberts and Sandra Bullock have navigated the post-romcom world by remodellin­g themselves as Hollywood’s elder stateswome­n, leveraging their status into empowermen­t fables (Erin Brockovich, Eat Pray Love), worthy Oscar-bait (Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Ben Is Back, The Blind Side) and the odd once-in-a-career masterpiec­e (Gravity).

Some of these movies have been good, others less so. But all have insisted their stars stay resolutely likable. The one film – or the one non-animated film – that did allow Bullock to enter the moral murk, Our Brand Is Crisis, was a box-office disaster. She has been one of the lucky ones: Meg Ryan, the definitive star of the romcom era, male or female, has not appeared on screen since 2016. Renée Zellweger has appeared in UK cinemas twice in the past 10 years – although she played a hammy baddie in Netflix’s gender-flipped version of Indecent Proposal, What/If – and Kate Hudson has all but disappeare­d.

Those career trajectori­es reveal plenty about how the golden-era romcoms, with their airy happily-ever-after lessons, were probably not as wholesome as they seemed. But for a more visceral version of the same message, tune into The Undoing to see the foppish bachelor of yesteryear reborn as a grizzled and bloated washout, his tailored tux traded in for an orange jumpsuit. It is a nice metaphor for the way the world has turned rotten – and proof that glorious renewal is always within reach.

The finale of The Undoing airs on Sky Atlantic at 9pm on 30 Nov

pane tanks

“For years, I clung to the idea of fleeing my country for the western world. In 2016, I managed to leave Gaza for New York, and soon after began the process of seeking asylum in California. People wanted to know how they could help my wife and I, aside from offering financial assistance. Then I received the opportunit­y to publish my photograph­s. It’s an opportunit­y so many of the refugees arriving in the US every day aren’t afforded: the chance to share one’s experience.

“My story is in part the story of my father, Imad al-Saftawi, who raised me with violence and fear, and who, after his 18-year imprisonme­nt in Israel, was set free in December of 2018.

An injured person is carried to the al-Shifa hospital. Civilians played a key role in transporti­ng the injured during Operation Protective Edge

“My parents cared for their children and wished us the best, but we were constantly berated. My siblings and I were made to feel guilty about our soft hands. We were threatened and punished if we didn’t go to the mosque for the five daily prayers. We were forced to wake at 5am to go with my father to pray the Fajr (dawn prayer).

Young people have to make the most of their lives: playing on rubble; burning steel wool to celebrate Ramadan; rollerblad­ing; celebratin­g Mohammed Assaf winning Arab Idol

Palestinia­n protesters on Gaza’s eastern border with Israel, holding mirrors to force Israeli soldiers to witness themselves shooting and reflect sunlight to confuse their vision

“I’m now seven thousand miles away from him, from Gaza, and I walk as a free man.

A Palestinia­n shepherd tends to his sheep near the buffer zone in the northern Gaza Strip. He says he has had many near-death encounters with the remote-control machine guns mounted on some of the Israeli watchtower­s

“Standing behind the camera, your hands shake as you document the suffering.

Rainbow flags; Alaa Habib, nine, whose school was badly damaged during Israel’s Operation Protective Edge; my 13-year-old sister Leen from our apartment in Gaza City; my wife Lara connecting with the world through her phone

Queuing for permission to leave Gaza – my wife and I had to pay an Egyptian officer to get our names on the list

“These photograph­s are visual memories that explore the lives behind the headlines. This work is dedicated to all those trapped in the hardships of this life, surviving in the hopes of a better tomorrow.”

Showing her colours

Jehad al-Saftawi is a documentar­y journalist, photograph­er and videograph­er dedicated to social justice and human rights storytelli­ng. His work has been featured by Reuters, BuzzFeed, AJ +, Mic, Al Jazeera America and the Huffington Post. He arrived in the US from Gaza in 2016 and is currently seeking asylum. He is internatio­nally recognised for setting up one of the few livestream­s documentin­g the 2014 Israeli offensive in Gaza

 ??  ?? Changing Gere ... Richard Gere in the 2012 film Arbitrage. Photograph: Allstar/ GREEN ROOM FILMS
Changing Gere ... Richard Gere in the 2012 film Arbitrage. Photograph: Allstar/ GREEN ROOM FILMS
 ??  ?? ‘Grant has gone to great pains to show his ugly side’ ... The Undoing. Photograph: HBO
‘Grant has gone to great pains to show his ugly side’ ... The Undoing. Photograph: HBO

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