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Lily James sparkles in ‘The Guernsey’

The throwback romantic drama is bursting with scenic vistas and earnest charm

- By Kenneth Turan

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel

Pie Society is an old-school, oldfashion­ed entertainm­ent, a romantic drama bursting with scenic vistas and earnest charm that contains just enough mystery to keep us involved.

In fact, as efficientl­y directed by the veteran Mike

Newell (Four Weddings and a Funeral, Enchanted

April), this is just the kind of satisfying mainstream diversion that people used to leave their homes and go out to the movies for. Until now.

For though Guernsey has played quite successful­ly theatrical­ly in Britain, France and other countries, in the US Netflix acquired the distributi­on rights, and not even a token theatrical release in Los Angeles is in the works at the moment.

There is one sense, however, where Guernsey, adapted from the Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows’ bestsellin­g novel by Thomas Bezucha, Kevin Hood and Don Roos, will look pleasantly familiar on home screens, and that is its cast.

No less than four actors, starting with star Lily James and including Jessica Brown Findlay, Matthew Goode and Penelope Wilton, had roles on PBS’ splendid Downton Abbey series.

James, fresh off facing off against Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill in

Darkest Hour and playing a young Meryl Streep in

Mamma Mia! Here We Go

Again, is the undisputed star here, though brooding Dutch actor Michiel Huisman (Game of Thrones) gives her a run for her money as one of the most killingly handsome farmers in cinema history.

Though the film doesn’t let on, it’s helpful to know going in that the island of Guernsey, though officially a self-governing dependency of the British crown, is geographic­ally closer to France than to Britain, which is why it was occupied by German troops during the Second World War, a key plot element.

James plays London writer Juliet Ashton, a sprightly young woman introduced in 1946, just after the war has ended, riding a bus with her handsome publisher Sidney Stark (Goode).

Ashton has just published a book, Izzy Bickerstaf­f Goes to War, written in that male character’s voice, and, eager to take on something in her own, she’s pleased but nervous when Stark tells her about an essay assignment from the London Times about the importance of reading.

Though there is tragedy in her background (her parents were killed during the Blitz), Ashton is determined to enjoy herself, and we see her dancing up a storm with a serious beau, wealthy, commanding American officer Mark Reynolds (Glen Powell).

One fateful day Ashton gets a letter from Guernsey. It’s from Dawsey Adams, that knockout handsome farmer, who has come across her name and address in a used book.

He introduces himself as a founding member of that Guernsey society, a book club actually, and innocently wonders if she could guide him to some other books. Because audiences have already seen what a Heathcliff lookalike Adams is, we know where this story is going well before the characters themselves.

The original Guernsey novel is an epistolary one, and the letters these two exchange are some of the film’s best moments.

We learn how the society was formed and how it got its odd name during that the Second World War occupation, and we meet its key members, including feisty guiding light Elizabeth McKenna (Brown Findlay), cantankero­us postmaster Eben Ramsey (the veteran Tom Courtenay), reserved Amelia Maugery (Wilton) and eccentric Isola Pribby (Katherine Parkinson).

Intrigued by the story of how much books meant to this isolated community, how reading kept everyone sane during the war, Ashton decides these folks would make the perfect subject for that Times article and, protestati­ons from beau Mark notwithsta­nding, determines to pop over to the island for a brief visit and get the story.

But while the folks on Guernsey are charmed that “a real writer has come to see us” and even offer to bake her a genuine potato peel pie, Ashton soon discovers that things there are not as unapologet­ically bucolic as she had imagined.

For one thing, key player Elizabeth is mysterious­ly off-island and no one can say when she might return. And for another, the residents are unexpected­ly reticent about sharing their story and are not eager to be written about at all.

Though logistical difficulti­es kept it from shooting on the island itself,

Guernsey’s look is always first rate, and though her character can be a little too invasive at times, James effortless­ly holds the story together.

Guernsey may not qualify as demanding cinema but it is eminently satisfying, and if in the final analysis it must be seen on home screens, that is preferable to no screens at all.

 ??  ?? Lily James in ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’.
Lily James in ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’.
 ?? Photos courtesy of Netflix ?? James and Michiel Huisman.
Photos courtesy of Netflix James and Michiel Huisman.
 ??  ?? A scene from ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’.
A scene from ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’.
 ??  ?? Glen Powell and James.
Glen Powell and James.

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