Saturday, February 11, 2023

'Empire of Light' - Olivia Colman Delivers Another Unforgettable Performance

 Taking us down memory lane on the timelessness of 80's cinemas, Sam Mendes Empire of Light is another love letter to the magic of cinema and its powerful effect in humans and how it's consistently present whether during our lowest of lows and highest of highs, affirming Nicole Kidman's AMC commercial where humans come to this place for magic, to laugh, and to cry.

This couldn't come to a most opportune moment, too. Where cinemas have started reeling again after what seems to be a very long pandemic lockdown, creating similarity on the present time, how the cinemas used to be before and after the lockdowns. It is a valentine not just to cinema, but to movies as exhibited in the cinema locally and around the globe. The film was also inspired by the concern that people weren’t going to these places anymore - places where people usually gather for shared experiences. In our case here in the Philippines, the continuous inflation and the looming and ongoing danger and scare of COVID-19.

Set in and around a vintage cinema in an English coastal town in the early 1980s, it follows Hilary Small (Olivia Colman), a cinema manager struggling with her mental health, and Stephen (Micheal Ward), a new employee who longs to escape the town where he deals with everyday prejudice. Together they unexpectedly find a sense of security through their unlikely relationship and together experience the healing power of music, cinema, and community among their peers in the theater.

First and foremost, the film is incredibly east to look at. Roger Deakins' luminous cinematography is the best part of the film. He's accompanied by tender and romantic score of Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, a solid and confident direction by Sam Mendes, and yet another absolute performance from Olivia Colman. Too bad, I think it's a bit let down by Mendes script as the story is convoluted with themes that he doesn't necessarily touch on further. Which isn't that bad to say the least. With a film tackling racism and mental health, sometimes there's really no way to face them with full grace and conclusion. What Mendes thrives instead is the inclusion of his apparent love for cinema. That to me is already a plus for Empire of Light

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