REBECCA (12)
D: Ben Wheatley
Netflix / Working Title / Big Talk (Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner & Nira Park)
UK 2020
121 mins
Thriller
W: Jane Goldman, Joe Shrapnel & Anna Waterhouse [based on the novel by Daphne du Maurier]
DP: Laurie Rose
Ed: Jonathan Amos
Mus: Clint Mansell
PD: Sarah Greenwood
Cos: Julian Day
Lily James (Mrs. de Winter), Armie Hammer (Maxim de Winter), Kristin Scott-Thomas (Mrs. Danvers), Keeley Hawes (Beatrice Lacy), Ann Dowd (Mrs. Van Hopper), Sam Riley (Jack Favell)
A remake of the 1940 film, with Lily James playing the young naive woman who falls for the charms of wealthy widower Maxim de Winter, becoming haunted by the spirit of his first wife shortly after they marry.
The trouble with remakes is that they have to improve upon the original film in some way, especially if the previous version has dated poorly or had significant faults, however, the 1940 adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s novel is still a masterpiece of cinema from Alfred Hitchcock that won Best Picture at the Oscars. How can it possibly be improved?
The short answer is: it can’t, so this version exists for financial reasons only. This is far more predictable (perhaps as I knew the story anyway), and aside from Kristin Scott-Thomas, the performances is ridiculously miscast. Lily James fails to capture the innocence that Joan Fontaine brought to the role and Armie Hammer is certainly no Laurence Olivier. The only area in the whole film where I could possibly see an improvement on the original is with the sets and costume design.
Perhaps it’s unfair to judge this film against the original, but since I consider the 1940 version to be amongst the best films ever made, it’s simply impossible not to. As a TV mini-series I may have been more forgiving, but as a feature film release, it fails to justify its existence.
4/10