| THE LINE OF BEAUTY |
2006 – UKDirector: Saul Dibb
- Reviewed by Linda
Now, I had heard of the book shortly after it won the Booker Prize in 2004, so promptly gave it a whirl. I have to admit, I got only halfway through. There was something about Hollinghurst's style that came across as cold and pompous. I didn't really care for the characters, and the density of the writing made me impatient. But whether you are a fan of the book or not, the BBC adaptation of In the Line of Beauty (with screenplay by Andrew Davies who adapted Tipping the Velvet and Pride & Prejudice) is quite faithful to the book. From what I read, I found many of the characters to be perfectly cast, especially Don Gilet as Leo and Hayley Atwell as the firecracker Fedden daughter Catherine. Even better than the book are Tim McInnerny and Alice Krige as the Fedden parents. The character of Nick is basically in love with his new adopted family, and you can see why. The Line of Beauty is not a warm and cosy movie, but thank goodness Nick is a relatively sympathetic character to follow around. He is thrown into a sort of Less Than Zero lifestyle with the added bonus of mingling with the famous and powerful. Thankfully, out of all the characters swirling around him he remains (relatively) grounded. If he were intolerable, the story probably would be, too. But he serves as our eyes, taking us inside the lives of power and money, as well as into the thriving gay scene before it quickly became shattered by AIDS. It shows us an era of gleaming beauty, then slowly, through Nick's perspective, reveals its ugliness and fragility. |
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