If there's pleasure to be derived from the misfortunes of others, then Julian Fellowes' wickedly entertaining adaptation of Nigel Balchin's nearly forgotten 1951 novel is a barrel of fun.
Separate Lies (2005)
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Reviews Counted:86
Fresh:61
Rotten:25
Average Rating:6.8/10
Consensus: Though the characters in this tasteful adult drama keep a stiff upper lip, the moral dilemmas are nuanced and the emotional pain feels real.
Synopsis: The British actor Tom Wilkinson's astonishing performance anchors SEPARATE LIES, a nuanced adult drama packed with moral dilemmas and existential questions. Julian Fellowes, who received an Academy... The British actor Tom Wilkinson's astonishing performance anchors SEPARATE LIES, a nuanced adult drama packed with moral dilemmas and existential questions. Julian Fellowes, who received an Academy Award for penning Robert Altman's GOSFORD PARK, makes his first foray into the director's chair with this sophisticated film, which centers around Wilkinson's repressed upper class lawyer James Manning. A well-groomed British society couple, James and his lovely, polished wife Anne (BREAKING THE WAVE's Emily Watson) live that sort of perfectly presentable life that John Cheever has made a literary career out of exposing. Cloaked under a veil of politeness, manners, and ultimately, self-delusion, they are so far deep into enacting their roles that they come to believe them. When their maid's husband is killed in a tragic hit-and-run accident in front of their vacation home, James immediately suspects that his dashing and suspicious neighborhood Bill Bule was behind the wheel. Upon telling Anne his intention to relay the hypothesis to the law, he receives some shocking news; Anne and Bill have been carrying out an affair for months, and they were both in the car as it turned into a tool of manslaughter. These harsh facts that James is confronted with have the effect of years of psychotherapy; the man of perfection is suddenly aware of the morass of half-truths and societal pressures that have led him to this point in life. As a man whose work rests upon upholding the law, he now must face the difficult moral dilemma of either turning in his own wife for a horrific crime or keeping up appearances. Based on Nigel Balchin's largely forgotten mid-century novel A WAY THROUGH THE WOOD, this is a movie that builds up its impact gradually and smoothly. Elegant and unobtrusive camerawork, a minimalist score, and performances of subtle and understated power add up to a story that is at once morality tale, social critique, and neo-noir mystery. [More]
Starring: Tom Wilkinson, Emily Watson, Rupert Everett, Hermione Norris
Starring: Tom Wilkinson, Emily Watson, Rupert Everett, Hermione Norris, Linda Bassett, John Neville
Director: Julian Fellowes
Director: Julian Fellowes
Producer: Steve Clark-Hall
Studio: 20th Century Fox
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Reviews for Separate Lies
Separate Lies is a soufflé that begins promisingly but never quite rises.
A neat, twisty little domestic drama about smart people, foolish choices.
A riveting morality play about the slippery slope of deception and the folly of dividing the world simplistically into those who are good and those who are evil.
Reliably wonderful Wilkinson and Watson bring honest, heartbreaking performances to a thought-provoking script by Gosford Park-er Julian Fellowes.
a somewhat stuffy British production whose boilerplate melodrama leaves little room for a revelatory examination of selfishness, sneakiness, self-preservation, and sacrifice
Separate Lies, the directorial debut of Julian Fellowes, is so busy constructing its labyrinthine plot that it often forgets to plumb the souls of its characters.
Writer-director Julian Fellowes fashions an elegant moral conundrum that's as fraught with intrigue as any Le Carre novel.
Wilkinsons James shines with a complex humanity one seldom encounters on the screen.
Wilkinson once again astonishes with his ability to convey weakness and strength, hypocrisy and gallantry, cruelty and compassion in the same male animal.
Julian Fellowes makes a splendid debut as a director with this mesmerizing look at sex, lies and infidelity among the British upper crust.
An intimate marriage melodrama in the tasteful tradition of Merchant-Ivory Masterpiece Theater, with a touch of Pinter (Betrayal) and Joseph Losey (Accident) thrown in
The focus is steady and intense, the theme clearly delineated and subtexts well thought out.
Latest News for Separate Lies
December 16, 2005:
London Movie Critics Present Their '05 Nominations
Movie City News shares with us a press release from the London Film Critics Group in which their various nominations are announced. Keep in mind that the Brit crits use their... More...
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