Times Colonist

It’s pretty, melodramat­ic and great fun

- REVIEW MOIRA MACDONALD

My Cousin Rachel Where: Cineplex Odeon Victoria Directed by: Roger Michell Starring: Rachel Weisz, Sam Claflin, Holliday Grainger Parental advisory: PG Rating: Three stars out of four

A white horse, ridden in an ominous fashion? An argument ending with the emphatic donning of a bonnet? A cast member best known for a recurring role in Downton Abbey (Iain Glen, i.e. Mary’s caddish fiancé in season 2)? A scene involving a carriage in which I practicall­y became faint at the sight of such very red, very plush velvet upholstery? Yes, My Cousin Rachel is that very specific movie treat: the British costume drama, taking place in the mid-19th century and involving a mysterious woman, a recklessly passionate man and countless Meaningful Glances under attractive candleligh­t.

Based on a 1951 novel by Daphne du Maurier (a book not quite as good as her Rebecca, but few books are), My Cousin Rachel originally became a movie a year after its publicatio­n, starring Olivia de Havilland and Richard Burton. For the reprisal, we have Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin — both of whom look lovely in period costume even if Claflin is giving off a bit of a Tom Cruisein-a-waistcoat vibe — and the seaside cliffs and rustic manors of Devon, where the story unfolds.

It’s one of passion and suspicion: Philip (Claflin), a bachelor orphan living in picturesqu­e squalour, learns by mysterious letter that his guardian, while convalesci­ng on the Continent, married just before his death; the wife, Rachel (Weisz), happens to be Philip’s cousin (just go with it) and may have played a role in said death. Or maybe not. In any case, up she turns at the (quickly tidied) manor, in her sleek black widow-wear. Cue the shirtless encounters, forbidden candlelit kisses, dramatic scratching of pens on legal documents and a truly stunning shot of pearls pouring down a carpeted staircase, indicating both a dramatic denouement and a real waste of some nice jewelry.

All of this is handled by writer/director Roger Michell (Notting Hill) with a lush briskness; he knows exactly what he’s making here. It’s pretty, it’s melodramat­ic-verging-on-silly, and if you like this sort of thing it’s great fun. (Look closely and I’m pretty sure Holliday Grainger, as Philip’s sensible but spurned girlfriend, says “talk to the hand” with her face in one scene; it’s a fairly epic eyeroll.) Weisz and the cinematogr­aphy (by Mike Eley) are both better than they need to be; as for the rest, you’ve seen it before, but you might well enjoy another round.

 ??  ?? Sam Claflin and Rachel Weisz star in My Cousin Rachel.
Sam Claflin and Rachel Weisz star in My Cousin Rachel.

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