THE CITY OF YOUR FINAL DESTINATION (2009)

Genre: Drama
Director: James Ivory
Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Laura Linney, Hiroyuki Sanada, Omar Metwally, Alexandra Maria Lara
RunTime: 1 hr 57 mins
Released By:  Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Some Homosexual References)
Official Website: http://www.screenmediafilms.net/coyfd/

Screening Dates:
 
8 September 2011

Synopsis: Omar Razaghi (Omar Metwally) wanted to gain permission from the family of Jules Gund, a Latin American author who committed suicide, to write Gund’s authorized biography. His academic and financial future depends on his writing of the book, and when the Gund family unexpectedly denies permission, his bossy girlfriend, Deirdre (Alexandra Maria Lara), pushes him to fly to South America to change their minds.

He arrives unannounced at the Gund estate, presided over by Jules’s widow, Caroline (Laura Linney), and his older brother Adam (Anthony Hopkins). Also in residence are Jules’s girlfriend Arden Langdon (Ms. Gainsbourg) and Pete (Hiroyuki Sanada), Adam’s much younger male Asian lover of 25 years.

Omar ends up staying at the Gunds for a period of time during which he has a tepid flirtation with Arden, wins the support of Adam — who tries to enlist him in a smuggling scheme — and pressures the intransigent Caroline to change her mind.. 

Movie Review:

This adaptation of Peter Cameron’s 2002 novel is the first film from director James Ivory (he’s 82 this year by the way) after the passing of his longtime producing partner Ismail Merchant. Over the past two decades, the Merchant-Ivory name was a brand of literary cinema in itself, from which acclaimed works such as “The Remains of the Day” and “Howard’s End” were spawned.

Unfortunately, this reportedly final film from James ivory will not be remembered in the same light as those aforementioned films- because as much as it tries its best to evoke the same literary feel, this solo venture by James Ivory is too genteel, too wandering, and ultimately too bland to make much of an impact. And that is despite the efforts by a fine cast- the likes of thespian Anthony Hopkins, Laura Linney and French actress Charlotte Gainsburg.

In adapting Cameron’s novel, longtime Merchant-Ivory screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala keeps her focus on the academic Omar Razaghi (Omar Metwally), a University of Kansas English graduate student who journeys down to Uruguay to meet the family of the late minor novelist Jules Gund. Omar wants to write a biography of the late author- and his academic and financial future depend on it- but the family has thus far refused their permission.

Ivory gets the events leading up to Omar’s unannounced visit at the Gund estate over and done with quickly, and leaves the rest of the film for his audience to get to know the eccentricities of the Gund family. There, Omar meets Jules’ imperious widow, Caroline (Linney), and his mistress Arden (Gainsburg) and her daughter Portia (Ambar Mallman). Not forgetting of course Jules’ older brother Adam (Hopkins) and his Japanese lover Pete (Hiroyuki Sanada).

Jhabvala’s screenplay allows Omar to have plenty of interactions with each one of the Gund family, but these largely lack much sizzle. The most interesting of these is the tension between Omar and Caroline, the widow bristling with hostility especially when she sees how Arden is taking too quickly to Omar. The romance between Omar and Arden however turns out too nondescript, while Omar’s talks with Adam mostly centre on Jules’ legacy- an unfinished novel and a mysterious suicide. An accident leads to the arrival of Omar’s domineering girlfriend (Alexandra Maria Lara), but even this turn of events doesn’t quite set the drama afire.  

Neither does the ensemble cast for that matter. Hopkins is good as always, but his role is hardly much of a stretch for him. Ditto for Linney, who gives the film’s sharpest performance as the brittle and thorny widow eager to hide some family secrets. Metwally on the other hand is woefully miscast, his genial performance undermining what potential dramatic moments the film has going for it.

Admittedly though there are few- and the fault ultimately lies with director James Ivory’s directorial choices. There is little to suggest that we as the audience should care for any of the characters or their dilemmas, which seems trivial and insignificant. The production values here are stellar as with any Ivory film, in particular the evocative cinematography by Javier Aguirresarobe (“Talk to Her,” “Vicky Cristina Barcelona”)- but the storytelling is ultimately what makes this a forgettable entry in the list of Ivory films.

Movie Rating:  

(Too genteel, too wandering and ultimately too bland to matter, this literary drama from James Ivory doesn’t even come close to the Merchant-Ivory classics) 

Review by Gabriel Chong


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