The Morning Call

Love story doomed from start in ‘Time Traveler’s Wife’ series

- By Kate Feldman

The new HBO show “The Time Traveler’s Wife” gives a whole new meaning to the term “childhood sweetheart­s.”

The main character, Clare Abshire, fell in love with Henry DeTamble when she was 6 and he was 31. Then again when he was 40. They started dating when she was 20, and he was 28. And somehow, somewhere, they found a sweeping love story that was doomed from the start.

“The Time Traveler’s Wife,” based on the 2003 bestsellin­g novel by Audrey Niffenegge­r, recently premiered and stars “Game of Thrones” actor Rose Leslie as the adult Clare and Theo James as Henry.

Through time, with their ages helpfully annotated on screen, Henry and Clare find their way to each other, first at the clearing in her childhood home, then a library in Chicago. She has loved him forever, and he has loved her forever.

“There’s an evolution that happens independen­tly but also to them as a couple, and how steadfast they become in committing to each other,” said Leslie, 35.

“There was definitely a kickback from her in her 20s, a kickback of not wishing for her decisions to be predetermi­ned by fate, and then Henry therefore knowing what decision she is going to make, and it’s inevitable, and she actually has no control over what she’s going to do ... Feeling untethered is something she’s going to have to adapt to and embrace rather than constantly fight.”

While Clare stays still, moving from child to teen to adult, Henry gets ripped

through time without warning and has seen his future, which includes decapitate­d feet and a fatal gunshot to the gut.

“He becomes chaotic and nihilistic, someone who has no anchor and doesn’t care about anything or anyone but himself,” said James, 37. “He’s highly selfish.”

Since Clare has already fallen in love with Henry, her job is to bring out the best in him.

“Because from a young age he’s become so embedded in her mind as who she wishes to spend her life with and how he is that it was more a stubbornne­ss on her part in making sure that she morphs him into who she fell in love with,” said Leslie.

“There’s an argument to be had that that would have happened organicall­y and Henry would be the person he was going to be even without her so openly showing her disappoint­ment in him. She extracts his free will ... because she was so strong in letting him know that he’s fallen short, yet again, of not becoming the 40-year-old version.”

“The Time Traveler’s Wife” brushes past most of

the uncomforta­ble details about the age difference­s on its way to prove its true love story. That story, executive producer Brian Minchin said, is in the little moments, fleeting seconds they get together before Henry is ripped through time again, and Clare is left with his clothes on the floor, and no idea of where or when he is or how long he’ll be gone.

“It’s a show about how every moment matters,” Minchin said.

Henry and Clare’s love story, though, doesn’t have a happy ending. Henry knows this all along. Clare figures out that eventually he’ll stop crashing in and out of her life.

“The one terrifying truth about every love story is that it’s going to end. It’s temporary. You’re on a timer and when the timer runs out, it’s over. Love is inextricab­ly tied to loss. Love entails loss,” creator Steven Moffat said.

“This is not ‘When

Harry Met Sally.’ This is ‘When Harry Met Sally

But He Knows He’s About To Die.’ It’s about loving in the moment because you don’t get that many moments.”

 ?? MACALL POLAY/HBO ?? Theo James and Rose Leslie star in “The Time Traveler’s Wife,” based on Audrey Niffenegge­r’s novel.
MACALL POLAY/HBO Theo James and Rose Leslie star in “The Time Traveler’s Wife,” based on Audrey Niffenegge­r’s novel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States