THE LONELY PASSION OD JUDITH HEARNE
THE LONELY PASSION OD JUDITH HEARNE
When a murder is committed aboard a luxury cruise liner gliding down the Nile, every passenger falls under suspicion. Luckily, among the travellers is none other than detective Hercule Poirot (Peter Ustinov), who takes it upon himself to unmask the culprit. An adaptation of Agatha Christie’s 1937 novel.
A poised, elegantly told and deeply affecting adaptation of Brian Moore’s 1955 novel, written when the author was just twenty-seven. Maggie Smith plays the title character, a middle-aged piano teacher who has devoted much of her life to caring for her ailing aunt and must now confront her own solitude. “She’s a lady”, remarks James Madden (Bob Hoskins), a fellow lodger in the Dublin boarding house they share - and he’s right. But Judith’s immaculate manners and genteel affectations barely conceal a quiet despair that drives her to the bottle. In 1950s Ireland, a single woman of her age is regarded as a spinster, yet Judith seems determined to rise above such narrow judgments, hoping that her bond with James might blossom into something more.
The novel’s journey to the screen was a long one. Both John Huston, who imagined Katharine Hepburn in the lead, and Irvin Kershner, who preferred Deborah Kerr, considered adapting it. The film finally came to life thanks to HandMade Films (co-founded by former Beatle George Harrison) which in the 1980s produced a remarkable string of British gems, including A PRIVATE FUNCTION and the cult classic WITHNAIL & I.
Jack Clayton’s film, however, strikes a very different tone. Through Maggie Smith’s masterly, deeply felt and astonishingly precise performance, Judith Hearne’s bruised emotional world unfolds before us - suffused with melancholy, longing and quiet resilience. For her extraordinary portrayal, Smith deservedly received another BAFTA award.
Text: Sebastian Smoliński
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