Reel Critics -- Mary Castillo and Sara Salam
‘Charlotte Gray†betrays, is betrayed by slow pace
“Charlotte Gray,†starring Cate Blanchett in the eponymous role, is a
deliberately paced spy drama set in the darkest days of World War II.
Based on the novel by Sebastian Faulks, it is a story about how war
forces people to lie and to betray one another in order to survive.
Charlotte’s life abruptly changes after a chance encounter with a
chatty bureaucrat on a train bound for London. At his invitation, she
attends a party where she meets a dashing Royal Air Force pilot, Peter
Gregory (played memorably by Rupert Penry-Jones), and discovers that her
travel companion is an operative in the British Secret Service.
When Peter’s plane is shot down over France, Charlotte believes she
has a chance to rescue him by signing up as a spy. She is one of the few
chosen to operate in the free-zone of southern France, where the Nazis
are held at bay by the cooperative Vichy government. Under the cover of a
new identity -- Dominique -- her life is entwined with those of a
resistance fighter named Julien (Billy Crudup), his father, Levarde
(Michael Gambon), and two orphaned boys whose parents were carted away
with the other Jewish citizens of the village.
Blanchett fearlessly dedicates herself to the role, revealing
Charlotte’s sources of weakness, along with her unrelenting hold on hope
and courage. The only major flaw in this film -- besides the slow pacing
-- is the lackluster chemistry between Blanchett and Crudup. Although the
role of Julien could easily have been rendered coldly fatalistic in the
hands of a lesser actor, Crudup is simply not believable as a potential
love interest.
Overall, the action is taut and each scene makes you wonder what could
possibly go wrong next. And the story is truly heartbreaking because it
doesn’t pull punches when showing a teacher who willingly betrays his
students and their families, Charlotte’s unwitting betrayal of the local
resistance fighters, and a son who is asked to betray his own father to
save the lives of the boys. If you’re looking for a clear
good-versus-evil, we-against-them kind of war movie, “Charlotte Grayâ€
will not be your cup of tea.
“Charlotte Gray†is rated PG-13 for some war related violence,
sensuality and brief strong language.* MARY A. CASTILLO, 28, is a Costa
Mesa resident.
Dude, ‘Orange County’ rocks out
“There’s supposed to be a bitchin’ new nightclub opening in Newport.â€
“He was crossing PCH!â€
“We have to help those seals in Corona del Mar.â€
Surfers? Cheerleaders? The lingo? Dude, it is “Orange County.†Well,
at least in film.
At Vista del Mar High School, you have a normal high school scene,
with cheerleaders dancing their routine, the music blasting, and everyone
just chilling with their friends and their cell phones and fancy cars.
But this view of Orange County is totally exaggerated, compared with the
real one.
It’s true, there are cheerleaders, music and groups of friends. But
the real lives of students are not as partyish. Don’t take me wrong, we
do have fun, but not to the point where there is total chaos.
Colin Hanks plays Shaun Brumder, a high school student who is a
fantastic writer and wants to go to Stanford. His family consists of his
drunken mother, a couch-potato brother named Lance and a stepfather named
Bob. All Shaun wants to do is go away to college so he doesn’t have to
put up with his family. But in the process of applying, the college
receives a copy of the wrong transcript. So Shaun doesn’t get accepted to
Stanford. But, the head cheerleader of Vista del Mar does, mainly because
her grandfather has connections.
The rest of the movie is about Shaun’s attempt to make Stanford accept
him. First, he goes to his father, who is this rich old guy who only
cares about money. He has his expensive mansion and luxury pool, and
doesn’t even bother to help his son. Shaun tries many other ways, but all
his plans seem to backfire. Tough luck!
“Orange County†is a movie making fun of the real and excellent Orange
County. So what if we have cell phones and nice cars. Who cares? The
movie is just hilarious for this reason.
It depicts certain characteristics of Orange County and manipulates
them so they seem totally stupid and lame, like we’re bad guys or
something. But we’re not. It’s interesting to see how other people think
of us, in a completely nonsensical way.
“Orange County†is a great movie that’s full of comedy, but the story
line is just plain weird. But, dude, this movie just rocks, man!
“Orange County†is rated PG-13 for drug content, language and
sexuality.
* SARA SALAM attends Corona del Mar High School as an eighth-grader.
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