This article was first published at Blogcritics
It is a ferociously grim story set in London's filthy alleys
filled with poverty and disease. It is
the London of Dickens' dust piles and rivers hiding swimming corpses in
Our Mutual Friend. It is the London of Bleak
House where the very streets bring their plague to even those who can
afford to live away from them. This could have been a Dickens novel but for two
things. This is a story about a prostitute, and not some cliché, trampled upon
lady of the evening, but an intelligent able woman besides. Then of course there's
the sex. Now if there's one thing the BBC has been adept at doing, it is
turning Dickens novels into small screen successes; Faber's novel gives them a
chance to do it once more, but this time with a large dose of sex and nudity. As
usual they manage it with style.
The plot in some sense is a variation on the theme of the
woman of ill repute with the heart of gold, she more sinned against than
sinning, except not quite. Sugar (Romola Garai), a prostitute living in the
brothel of her mother/madame (Gillian Anderson) is taken as a mistress by an
ineffectual aspiring writer she has successfully encouraged to take a greater
part in his family's business (Chris O'Dowd). He has a wife (Amanda Hall) and
child, but the young wife seems to be insane, although her problems are clearly
related to sexual trauma as a result of the loss of virginity and childbirth.
This is melodrama of the highest order as Sugar grows more and more involved in
the family, until the inevitable chickens come home to roost.
The story makes an effective feminist critique against the
treatment of women in Victorian England and by extension to woman today as
well. Using some of the familiar Victorian tropes, the mad woman in the attic
(although in this case it's the bedroom), the eternal governess, as well as the
golden hearted tramp, it depicts the plight of many women during the period. There
are nods to things like abortion and the somewhat feeble reform efforts. With a
title taken from a song in Tennyson's The Princess, a poem
about the establishment of a woman's society in which men are not welcome, this
should not be surprising.
Performances are somewhat uneven. Garai's Sugar is
impressive, a strong competent woman who manages to be a sympathetic character
even when she acts badly. Gillian Anderson as Mrs. Castaway seems modeled on
Miss Havisham without the bridal ensemble. She makes an effective harpy. Amanda
Hall is effective as the doll like wife unable to cope with the physical
demands of marriage. Perhaps it has something to do with
Bridesmaids, but I found it difficult to buy Chris O'Dowd as
a Victorian gentleman, either as an effete aspiring writer at the beginning or
as a successful businessman through most of the series. In an interview, director
Marc Munden talks about how O'Dowd adds a comic element to the character which
presumably was why he was cast. The problem is that it doesn't really work.
The two disc DVD set now available from Acorn Media includes
biographies of the characters on the first disc, and interviews and deleted
scenes on the second.
No comments:
Post a Comment