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Dakota Fanning and Polly Dartford as Euphemia and Sophia Gray in Effie Gray (2014)
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Tom Sturridge as John Everett Millais |
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Effie Gray with John Ruskin (Greg Wise) |
Sophie Gray:
[narrating]
Once, a beautiful young girl lived in a very cold house in Scotland. The
house was cold because someone's grandfather killed himself there. One
day, the grandson came to visit the house. He thought the beautiful girl
was an angel came down to Earth. The grandson worked very hard. He read
and thought and drew and wrote. He wrote a fairy story just for her.
She was twelve years old. Her mother and father were kind, but his were
wicked. When she grew up, he married her. ~from Effie Gray (2014)
It is a wonderful to see a child actor or actress blossom in an adult role, especially when they surpass whatever expectations we might have had for them. Such is the case of Dakota Fanning in
Effie Gray (2014), where she so adapts Victorian British mannerisms that the viewer can easily forget she is an American. Wearing a mask of serenity, Effie's inner torment is seen only in the eyes, which project an abyss of sorrow and suffering throughout most of the film. In the end, her eyes glow with radiant happiness, although the rest of her expression is immobile. I was in awe watching the film. The character of Effie, based upon John Ruskin's spurned bride, is a challenging role, full of subtleties, but Miss Fanning acquitted herself magnificently.
From the
Los Angeles Times:
Genteel
almost but not quite to a fault, "Effie Gray" is the decorous treatment
of a story that shocked Victorian England: the romantic triangle of
critic John Ruskin, his seriously unhappy wife, Euphemia "Effie" Gray,
and his protege, the painter John Everett Millais. Starring
Dakota Fanning as the young Scottish bride and written by costar Emma
Thompson, "Effie Gray" is never less than gorgeous to look at both
indoors and out, as cinematographer Andrew Dunn, production designer
James Merifield and costume designer Ruth Myers and their teams
collaborate to create an enveloping, almost rhapsodic look for the film.
But
all this visual splendor puts "Effie Gray" in danger of treating its
scandalous story the way Ruskin apparently treated his wife, as a
beautiful object to be admired from a distance but never emotionally
engaged with. Directed
by Richard Laxton, "Effie Gray" is fortunate to have enough strong
performances by Fanning, Thompson and top-flight costars (including
cameos by James Fox, Robbie Coltrane, Derek Jacobi and even Claudia
Cardinale) to eventually overcome the doldrums of decorum and create the
feeling we've been needing.
Ruskin,
the most influential art critic of the age, first met Effie when she
was a girl of 12. The two were married when Effie was 20 and longing to
leave rural Scotland for the cultural sophistication of London. There
Ruskin held forth to the Pre-Raphaelite painters who were his disciples
on his belief that "nature must rule every stroke of your brush. Paint
what you see, draw what you see."
In
this film, Ruskin (well-played by Greg Wise, Thompson's husband) looks
on Effie as a perfect beauty and considers himself "the luckiest of
mortals" when she agrees to marry him, and she feels fortunate as well. The
newlyweds are to live with Ruskin's parents (professionally played by
veterans David Suchet and Julie Walters), but things start to go badly
from the moment they walk in the door of their new home. That's when the
critic's doting, overpossessive mother lays hands on "my treasure" and
announces that she can't wait to personally give him his bath.
It
gets worse when, during a wedding night that has been much commented on
from then to now, Effie disrobes in front of her husband, only to have
him abruptly get up and leave the bedroom. The reasons for this
non-consummation of the marriage have been endlessly speculated upon
(the film refrains from expressing an opinion), but it was only the
beginning of Effie's travails. Starting
the very next morning, Effie finds herself a victim of Victorian
decorum, someone with no real place in her husband's life. He doesn't
want her around when he writes and thinks, not even to sharpen his
pencils, and his officious mother, reminding Effie that "you have
married no ordinary man," tells her to find solace in growing roses and
reading the Bible. "What
shall we do, what do married people do?" she asks her husband
plaintively, and he replies, truthfully but unhelpfully, "I have as
little idea as you."
The
couple goes off to Italy, where Ruskin works obsessively on one of his
books, "The Stones of Venice," and she finds herself romantically
courted by a handsome Italian (Riccardo Scamarcio), a situation that
only makes Ruskin crankier. "Venice was once a virgin," he tells her
pointedly. "Now she is a harlot."
The
only real ray of light in Effie's life is Lady Eastlake, the wife of
Charles Eastlake (Fox), the influential president of the Royal Academy.
As played by Thompson, who has given herself the film's best lines, Lady
Eastlake is the fearless voice of reason this situation clearly needs. Fanning,
for her part, completely understands her role and its gently feminist
context. Her performance is understated but always effective, a through
line for audiences when things on screen go quiet.
The
film heats up, as does this young wife's life, when she gets to spend
some time in her native Scotland with her husband and the young painter
Millais, well-played by Tom Sturridge. His passionate nature attracts
her, but in a culture where divorce was forbidden, this presents a
problem. (Read more.)
The marriage of Effie to John Ruskin was eventually annulled and she was able to marry Millais, with whom she had eight children. No one really knows why Ruskin refused to consummate his marriage but it seems to me that he had so idealized Effie's beauty that he could not deal with her humanity. I wonder if he had a madonna/whore complex that can be exacerbated by looking at porn. Women to him were either untouchable statues or worthy only of contempt for their lack of purity. He had loved the child but not the woman. It was as if in his high-mindedness he saw himself as too good for the woman she had become, such was his disdain and contempt. He later tried to say that Effie was crazy, but the rest of her life as Mrs. Millais she showed herself to be mentally sound. The film does a great job in capturing Effie's misery in a dysfunctional relationship, and anyone who has ever been in such a relationship can identify.
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