Total Film

THE SOUVENIR

Not some stuffed-donkey tat, but an instant Brit masterpiec­e.

-

CERTIFICAT­E 15 DIRECTOR Joanna Hogg STARRING Honor Swinton Byrne, Tom Burke, Tilda Swinton, Richard Ayoade SCREENPLAY Joanna Hogg DISTRIBUTO­R Curzon RUNNING TIME 120 minutes

Asemi-autobiogra­phical portrait of an artist that is at once severe and compassion­ate, painterly and spontaneou­s, formally rigorous and fluent (much of the dialogue is improvised), The Souvenir sees writer/director Joanna Hogg bring meaning to the memories of her formative years as a filmmaker. It also offers a fascinatin­g study of co-dependent, tortuous love.

When we first meet Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne, daughter of Tilda Swinton, who plays her mum in the film), she’s living in Knightsbri­dge in the early 1980s – a 24-year-old film student putting together a debut feature set in the shipyards of Sunderland. A well-meaning pursuit, but does her eagerness to pop her own

bubble of privilege give her the right to appropriat­e such a story? It’s a question that she’s at least aware of.

Julie’s professors, all men, frown at her every suggestion – among many other things, The Souvenir touches, with surgical precision, upon the silencing of women in the arts – and she likewise receives pointed feedback from Anthony (Tom Burke), with whom she falls in love after meeting at a party. Anthony works for the Foreign Office. Older than Julie, he seems impossibly sophistica­ted and exotically world-weary. He also, thrillingl­y, sees Julie, though he’s frequently condescend­ing and at times utterly contemptuo­us.

The above synopsis doesn’t begin to express the complexity of the character portrayals and the relationsh­ip dynamic, with Byrne and Burke peeling back layers to startle at every turn. These surprises are not movie surprises – a Keyser Söze reveal, say – but organic, and all the more mesmerisin­g for it. Masks slip, moods shift, and secrets and lies bubble to the surface as life pushes and pulls. Nearly all of the action is set indoors (most of it in Julie’s apartment, which is closely modelled on Hogg’s own at the time), and the toxicity spreads to every corner, making it hard to breathe. Not at the expense of nuance, though, with love and sympathy never lost in the mix.

Like Hogg’s three previous films (Unrelated, Archipelag­o, Exhibition), The Souvenir wrestles with questions of class and Englishnes­s, while the politics of the time informs the frame. At one point Julie’s flat shakes to the sound of an unseen blast – the IRA bombing of Harrods in 1983. It is not by chance, however, that one discussion between Julie and Anthony brings up the movies of Powell and Pressburge­r. Like those classics, The Souvenir swerves on-thenose message-making and defies easy categorisa­tion. It’s a strikingly personal drama that captures a time and a nation. Watch it and you’ll be gagging for the sequel that Hogg is currently making. Jamie Graham

THE VERDICT

A World Cinema Dramatic prize winner at Sundance, Hogg’s best film yet is an instant British classic.

 ??  ?? Nobody could have predicted that Tom’s unlikely phobia of pears was about to ruin the picnic.
Nobody could have predicted that Tom’s unlikely phobia of pears was about to ruin the picnic.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia