Monday, September 24, 2012

Page Eight (2011)



This week I have as subject again a made for TV movie, picked while looking over the long Emmy nominations due to an apparently interesting story. Maybe I should've taken a look also at the actual nominations it has (= nothing major), or at least at the number, because "Page Eight" is clearly not a masterpiece.

The movie is a British production, taking place during one week from the life of a high-ranking employee of MI5 (= the UK internal security service). The guy receives a file to analyze from the service director, who is also his best friend. The file seems to have a compromising information somewhere at the bottom of page eight (that's where the title comes from). Information which involves Downing Street 10 (= the prime minister) and which is "leaked" in the inner circle of MI5 and a few other high-ranking officials. What follows is essentially a sort of political thriller in which some people want this circle to stay closed, and others (who in the end are reduced to the first character) are more inclined for the opposite. It may seem that I already gave a big spoiler but there is more to be seen (I actually didn't even spoil the beginning of the movie). Unfortunately we have again a director who probably wanted more than he can actually managed to do. And if the directing is after all so & so, I found the screenwriting (by the same guy) awful. Maybe it's only me, I don't know what to say ... But the typical British atmosphere seems to be pushed a bit too much to the extreme and ends up looking fake. So, to be more clear, the first part of the movie is a chain of dry sarcasm and want-to-seem-witty lines (maybe if this style wouldn't be overused they could actually be considered witty). The second part is another chain of dry melancholy and ... again want-to-seem-witty lines (although in a more moderate quantity). To draw the line, I have never heard anybody talking naturally in the way the movie characters do (not at that frequency of using the bunch of figures of speech you can hear combined with the British imperturbable calmness).

The subject, even if it has some potential and looks actually catchy at some point is solved in a rather simplistic manner in the end. I guess the best part in the movie is the cast. Unfortunately, all the weight given in a positive way by the presence of Bill Nighy as lead character, accompanied by Michael Gambon and others, is practically canceled by the dialogues lack of credibility. Well, again, maybe it's just me and the density of "out of normal" dialogue is not that high = case in which you might have a movie that you might like ...

Rating: 3 out of 5 (at the limit)
 



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