Cyprus Today

An intense, subtle, adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novella

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❍Saoirse ON CHESIL BEACH

(15, 110 mins) Drama/Romance. Ronan, Billy Howle, Emily Watson, Samuel West, Anne-Marie Duff. Director: Dominic Cooke.

SOME of the most important relationsh­ips in our lives are galvanised by seizing the right words to express an invisible churn of conflictin­g emotions.

Other relationsh­ips fracture and ultimately implode in agonising, awkward silences between friends and partners, who are afraid to acknowledg­e that burning desires now run, at best, lukewarm.

Published in 2007, Ian McEwan’s novella On Chesil Beach is an astonishin­gly moving portrait of doomed love, set against the ravishing backdrop of the titular stretch of shingle in Dorset.

It’s a heartbreak­ing read that generates one sobering emotional crescendo after another, like waves crashing against a forlorn shore.

McEwan has skilfully adapted his Booker Prize-nominated work and the film, directed by Dominic Cooke, comes impressive­ly close to capturing the quiet, body-shuddering intensity that transfers from the page into the tear-filled mind’s eye.

Three-time Oscar nominee Saoirse Ronan and Billy Howle are impeccably cast as trembling virginal newlyweds, who are ill-equipped to navigate the minefields of each other’s insecuriti­es and sensitivel­y handled intimation­s of sexual abuse by one parent.

There is a tragic inevitabil­ity to the trajectory of the couple’s fragile relationsh­ip, and a quiet devastatio­n shared by us and the characters as awkwardnes­s, shame and incomprehe­nsion press a self-destruct button, inflicting deep wounds that will never heal.

Gifted violinist Florence Ponting (Ronan) and history graduate Edward Mayhew (Howle) prepare to spend their first night together as husband and wife in a hotel located close to Chesil Beach.

The sound of lapping waves drifts in through billowing curtains as the couple unpacks.

Waiters arrive to serve dinner in Florence and Edward’s room.

“We do the silver service on the beef, sir, and then we retire,” one waiter explains, apologetic­ally.

As the afternoon bleeds into evening, a mosaic of flashbacks

the couple’s radically different background­s. e bride is at the mercy of strict moral codes of the by her mother Violet (Emily Watson) and father amuel West), the groom draws on his relationsh­ip ain-damaged” mother Marjorie (Anne-Marie Duff) his passions. in the room builds gradually to the moment d Edward must consummate their marriage. about the last time you got into a fight,” she asks temporary reprieve from his seduction. “I need to worst side.” il Beach is an artfully composed character study of iveté and small, telling gestures such as Florence’s one particular hand touches her shoulder. nd Howle are an attractive pairing and Watson, est provide sterling support in small yet pivotal

. most terribly sorry . . . . ” whispers Florence as she the right words — no, any words — to soothe her

film elegantly reveals the chinks of pain and regret tering syllable.

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 ??  ?? Saoirse Ronan as Florence Ponting and Billy Howle as Edward Mayhew
Saoirse Ronan as Florence Ponting and Billy Howle as Edward Mayhew

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