A One Mann’s Movies review of “The Wife” (2018).

I missed “The Wife” when it came out in September, but finally caught it a few weeks ago.  (Been a busy time at work so have a bit of a backlog of reviews!).

Bob the Movie Man’s Rating:

Certification:

UK: 15; US: R.

The Plot.

Joan Castleman (Glenn Close) is the doting wife of internationally renowned writer Joe Castleman (Jonathan Pryce). As we start the film, Joe has just received a call from Stockholm. No, it’s not an “amusing story about a goat” (for any MM2 fans out there). It’s notification that he is to receive the Nobel prize for literature. As Joan listens to the news on the extension, there is something in her eyes that betrays mixed emotions.

Nothing like good news on the phone to lift your mood. Glenn Close and Jonathan Pryce. (Source: Meta Film London Ltd)

They travel to Sweden (on Concorde, obviously) with their son Max (Max Irons) – a writer at the start of his career. Max and Joe have a strained relationship.

Also in Stockholm is Nathanial Bone (Christian Slater) – the bane of Joe’s life, since he seems insistent on writing the biography of the great man. As Nathanial picks through the history of the couple, things start to unravel in unexpected ways.

Castleman gnaws at a Bone. Christian Slater, Glenn Close and Jonathan Pryce. (Source: Meta Film London Ltd)

What a performance!

The heart of this film, and the main reason for watching what is really a bit of a pot-boiler, is the performance by Glenn Close. It’s a remarkable demonstration of the acting craft and 110% Oscar worthy.

Don’t get me wrong…. as I watched the Oscars live in the wee-hours of Monday morning I let out a WHOOP of joy when our own national treasure Olivia Colman picked up the award.  But I have to say that I think Glenn Close was rather robbed. Close can act brilliantly without saying a single word. In fact most of her best scenes are reaction shots to what she is listening to. 

Dirty pool. Bone (Slater) homes in on the son Max (Max Irons). (Source: Meta Film London Ltd)

In comparison I found Jonathan Pryce to be a soupçon over-the-top as the feted writer, and I didn’t find the portrayal of Bone by Slater to be terribly convincing. So it’s a very mixed acting bag in my view. 

Utterly gorgeous in a way that only Swedish women can be is Karin Franz Körlof as the personal photographer Linnea. She can also act! 

Moral of the tale. If you’re the wife always insist on the ugly personal photographer. The gorgeous Karin Franz Körlof. (Source: Meta Film London Ltd)

A perfectly pleasant movie

Directed by Swedish director Björn Runge and with a screenplay by Jane Anderson, it’s a perfectly pleasant way to spend a couple of hours.  The story is intriguing enough to keep your interest, although it plays its hand so early that the simmering suspense element ebbs out of the film. A final “Sixth Sense” style of reveal might have been much more effective. 

Bust up at the Nobels. (Source: Meta Film London Ltd)

But this is above all a film to relish the performance of Close: the facial acting during the speech at the awards ceremony is something that should be studied at acting schools for years to come. 

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Trailer:

By bobwp

Dr Bob Mann lives in Hampshire in the UK. Now retired from his job as an IT professional, he is owner of One Mann's Movies and an enthusiastic reviewer of movies as "Bob the Movie Man". Bob is also a regular film reviewer on BBC Radio Solent.

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