Empire (UK)

THE ESCAPE

- IAN FREER

DIRECTOR Dominic Savage

CAST Gemma Arterton, Dominic Cooper, Frances Barber

PLOT On the outside, Tara Ainsworth (Arterton) seems to have it all: husband (Cooper), two kids, two cars, a conservato­ry. Yet inside, she is dying a slow death — until a picture book ignites a revolution in her heart and mind. HEART-WRENCHING BUT dispassion­ate, intelligen­t but empathetic, subtle but raw, The Escape is a riveting portrait of a woman trapped living the wrong life. Written and directed by Dominic Savage, best known for TV dramas such as True Love and The Secrets, its secret weapon is Gemma Arterton, who beautifull­y illuminate­s a stay-at-home mother who seemingly has it all but feels emotionall­y, spirituall­y, intellectu­ally bereft. She is a revelation, displaying depths, colours and truths you could never imagine watching

The Prince Of Persia.

For it’s first half at least, The Escape

is a postcard from the edge sent by one desperate housewife. One half of a working class couple made good, Arterton’s Tara is in a crumbling marriage to Mark (Cooper) with two children she has no natural feeling for. Her days are a miasma of nursery runs, peeling veg and cleaning up spills, yet on a trip to London she gets a spark of another life in the form of a picture book she discovers at a South Bank stall.

The Lady And The Unicorn, the story of Medieval French tapestries housed in Paris, awakens a need to nourish her soul beyond her Kent semi.

The couple’s arguments are subsequent­ly brutal, yet Savage’s writing finds subtler ways to show the gulf between husband and wife, such as a simple exchange about butternut squash. While stylistica­lly it feels European, almost Dardenne Brothers-like in its observatio­nal style and accumulati­on of telling details over plot, Tara’s ennui is movingly etched in very British surroundin­gs, be it the car park at Asda, mid-range restaurant­s or the mindnumbin­g tedium of family barbecues.

Cooper’s Mark isn’t evil, just myopic to his wife’s needs, steadfast in the conviction that providing for his family is enough — the actor perfectly etches his befuddleme­nt and anger that she doesn’t appreciate his effort. But this is Arterton’s show, delivering a journey from despair to an earned enlightenm­ent without a false beat. It’s a film ostensibly built on close-ups of her face and, be it her tears during anal sex or listening to voicemail messages from her children, you cannot take her eyes off her.

When Tara finally makes her escape, the film enters a more movie-movie zone, the colours become brighter, the music more lyrical. Although there are still twists in the tale, Savage is less surefooted with wish fulfilment than he is with marital discord. Still the brilliance of Arterton ensures you’ll care. And then some.

VERDICT A kind of Ken Loach does

Shirley Valentine, The Escape is not a comfortabl­e watch. But it is a rewarding one, thanks to Dominic Savage’s forensic investigat­ion of a disintegra­ting marriage and careerbest work by Gemma Arterton.

 ??  ?? The thought of pudding was far more appealing.
The thought of pudding was far more appealing.

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