(My choice again, as this was a modest critical fave and got
a few Oscar nods.)
In the 70s, Jodie Foster was a pre-teen wonderkund, making a
name for herself with a couple of Scorcese classics and a Disney fan-fave. But
the 80s were not he her decade; Hollywood din’t quite know what to do with her
puckish charm and razor-sharp intellect. All that changed with The Accused and her subsequent Oscar win
for Best Actress, and all that really changed
with her-follow up, a little-known thriller named The Silence of the Lambs, and yet another Oscar win for it. By the
mid-90s she was in the driver’s seat, and could pretty much pick whatever she
wanted to peruse.
And so one project she opted for was an adaption of the play
Idioglossia, producing it with her
newly founded company, Egg Pictures. She placed herself in the lead role of
Nell (also the film’s title), an illiterate backwoods woman who can communicate
with a language known only to herself. Clearly Foster had an affinity with this
character and this topic matter – it’s evident in her devotion to the role –
and she was rewarded with another Oscar nomination, although no win. And the
movie itself has much going for it; it entertains some pretty heady ideas about
basic human rights and the “what’s best for…” argument, particularly where it
pertains to those with special needs and uncivilized. But while Nell is hard not to like, it’s also hard
to too get too excited about it. The material here feels just a bit thin to
sustain a feature-length release.
Liam Neeson plays Jerry Lovell, a country doctor who
discovers Nell, left alone after the sudden death of her elderly mother, in a
remote North Carolina shack. Kicking and screaming at the first sight of a
stranger, she appears to speak a language of gibberish, but Lovell is
determined to “tame” her enough to be able to help her. He enlists the help of
Dr. Paula Olsen (Natasha Richardson), an autism specialist, but when she
arrives with a court order to institutionalize her, he responds with a court
order of his own to prevent it. The judge withholds a verdict for three months,
long enough for both doctors to study Nell and learn her language so he can
render a more informed decision.
.
Lovell and Olsen move out to the woods (she in a nice boat
on the river) to study the “wild child,” and, through the use of monitoring
devices, observation and sheer patience, begin to realize that Nell’s language
isn’t that far removed from English – it actually turns out to be a very
distorted dialect learned from her mother, who had suffered a severe
speech-affecting stroke. Lovell, in particular, develops a rapport with Nell –
after he realizes that Nell’s fear of men stems from her witnessing her other’s
rape, he resolves to use her gender as a way of neutralizing that phobia. All goes
well with the study (with both doctors seeming to develop romantic feelings for
one another), until the outside world steps in; local boys learn about Nell and
taunt and sexually harass her, followed by inevitable media coverage. Nell is
brought to a psychiatric hospital with disastrous results, and her court
appearance doesn’t look so good either. But Nell rises to the occasion with an
unexpected attempt to speak – enough, evidently, for a judge to allow her
independence, and in an epilogue five years later, she enjoys a reunion with
the doctors, now married to each other, along with an extended family of
locals. And she appears to speak better English too.
Nell has a lot of
nice tings going. Planted in the luscious mountains of North Carolina (and
filmed there too), the story makes use of its misty vistas – you can almost
feel like you’re there too. The “bad guys” in the film – the psychologists who
want to study Nell (we all know how that goes) – are depicted without too much
caricature. Clearly the Olsen character, who becomes Lovell’s love interest,
must be somewhere in the middle, and I admired her underplayed ambivalence.
Only at the end does she truly demonstrate feelings toward her colleague, and
even then it’s more a matter of professional course. Not every movie has to
have a sun-drenched love scene halfway through.
And I liked the Lovell character a great deal – he, after
all, affords the film its main theme about how civility keeps us from feeling
free and truly alive, cognizant of what really matters. (A recurring picture of
Nell standing on a river log, arms outstretched toward the heavens, is its
representative image.) Neeson ably makes the character work, along with its
dynamicism. His change is not quite as obvious as Olsen’s, but it’s there. And
he even manages to rescue some scenes that could easily have been completely
laughable, such as the moment when he needs to show Nell his penis so she’ll be
less fearful of the “weapon” used against he mother. Or the scene where he and
Olsen sweet-talk each other using Nell’s gobbledygook, the premise being that
her tongue is more emotionally connective.
But Nell has some
flaws too, director Michael Apted takes a leisurely pace in telling his tale,
even when parts of the film require a stronger momentum (like the buildup to
the court case and the threat by outside interlopers). As a matter of fact, the
whole thing could benefit from being more tightly wound, and even featuring a
bit more backstory for Lovel and Olson – why does he yearn for that freedom of spirit that he see’s in Nell; why does
she stick so rigidly to her pedantry?
There’s also a few loose ends. The local sheriff’s wife has
some psychiatric issues of her own that are never made clear, and we’re led to
believe that perhaps she’s Nell’s long-lost sister, but that’s never
ascertained. And then there’s the ending, which pushes the disbelief that we’ve
been heretofore willing to suspend. Just before the judge will likely remand
her to a hospital, Nell suddenly rises to the occasion with an impassioned
quasi-coherent speech about love and interconnectivity. And suddenly we
dissolve to the five-years-later epilogue, in which we must assume she’s
legally won her independence and can live back where she belongs. Apted robs us
of that payoff, that doesn’t have to be overdramatic but it does have to be there.
By and large, Nell just
feels too TV-movie, despite some occasional cinematic elements. I will remember
these characters, but only as flattened representations of characteristics, not
as fully fleshed-out people in their own right. And for a play adaption that is
all about character, that is important. Still, it’s worthwhile for some of the
ideas it entertains.
Rating: ***
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