Craig here with Take Three. Today:
Emily Watson
Take One: Upstairs 0 - Downstairs 1
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The Academy often doubles up with their supporting ladies â" i.e. Weaver and Cusack for Working Girl, Farmiga and Kendrick for Up in the Air, and so on. It was true also for 2001âs
Gosford Park's Helen Mirren and Maggie Smith. I always thought a third shouldâve been added. Watson delivered five-star service and, for me, the filmâs best performance by a country (house) mile. She played Elsie, the knowing, spirited maid that doomed homeowner Sir William (Michael Gambon) liked to see doing plenty of overtime.Among the film's interviewing mini-plots, Elsieâs narrative was an intriguing re! d herring, a side dish. But then Gosford Park wasnât really about the murder as much as it was about class. Watson had plenty.
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Watson in Gosford ParkAltmanâs film was packed wall-to-wall with high-level thesping and hidden somewhere in the pack was Watson effortlessly showing everybody up. Mirren was great, Smith very good, but Watson's was the most likeable, instinctive and vibrant turn. In Gosford Park Watson proves adept at making familiar type seem fresh and altogether vital. Sheâs always believable on screen. Mirrenâs emotional resolution was Gosford Parkâs sad closer, but Watson sent the film off on a more optimistic note.
Take Two: Staring death in the face
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We were all was vi! cariously looking out for Watsonâs character Reba McClane in!
Red Dragon (2002). Given the circumstances, somebody needed to. Reba was the blind co-worker dubiously romanced by heavily-tattooed serial killer Francis Dolarhyde (Ralph Fiennes). Falling for the mentally-suspect motherâs boy was a mistake, sure, but appearances can be deceptive and Reba didnât have the foresight. Their shared outsiderdom brought them together but with one major difference: he was madder than a box of frogs, she wasnât; he went around watching other peopleâs home videos, gluing folk to wheelchairs then setting them on fire and eating paintings, she didnât.
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Watson in Red DragonWatson was spot on in the role offering no concession to cliché, no unnecessary dwelling on the âdisabilityâ aspect, no life-affirming monologues. Instead she provides solid, amiable character acting. Her final moments, ! wondering aloud to Edward Norton whether she âdrew a freakâ, are brief but minutely heartbreaking. Watson turned a shopworn character, twice mislabelled a victim, into a full-bodied person, coloring her in with nuanced detail. Reba wasnât just a pitiable blind girl. She was refreshingly knowing, slightly cynical and believably vulnerable in ways we donât normally see.
Take Three: Hard times, clean hands
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Grandiose, revisionist westerns made with lyrical verve, riper than thou character names and terse dialogue arenât ten a penny these days, so it's best to relish them when they roll around. Ace Aussie oddity
The Proposition (2005) was one of my films of 2006; Watson made my best actress list. Martha Stanley, the homely, nervy wife to Ray Winstoneâs Captain was quietly electrifying. Here was a woman ill-ad! justed to frontier lief, stuck in the (out)back of beyond in a! godfors aken 1800s town built on violence. This delicate English flower wilted in the heat of the Australian desert. Emily's Martha gradually hardens to all that death and dust, but never accepts it. Sheâs one of writer Nick Caveâs best creations: like a doomed heroine in one of his murder ballads, but fleshed out and allowed to cautiously flourish.
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Watson in The PropositionEven though Martha was on the periphery of all the manly action, Hillcoatâs camera is still attentive to her. Through Watsonâs beautifully underplayed performance we are granted access to her inner thoughts. When she overhears of her husbandâs betrayal (concerning the flogging of a man believed to have raped and murdered her only friend), we not only witness her utter disbelief in cutaway, but the scene itself ends on her exhausted yet defiant stride out of her is! olated house. Her blue-brown dress is at elegant odds to the expansive, harsh desert terrain she heads towards.
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Watson in the bathWatson's performance is a set of emotive actions finely woven together. Watch the way she inspects her water-withered hands in the bath as she talks of her grief, the way her deathly dream virtually obliterates her own waking perception of events, how her brittle defiance turns to resigned revulsion during the flogging scene and, in the brutal climax, her frozen terror. The reality of how hard a slog life was for Martha is etched all over Emily's face. Three more key films for the taking:
Breaking the Waves (1995)
, Hilary & Jackie (1998),
Punchdrunk Love (2002)
Great c! lassic f ilms, best all time movies
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