Category Archives: 1996

Emma (1996)

Emma
Directed by Douglas McGrath
Written by Douglas McGrath from a novel by Jane Austen
1996/UK
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon rental

Mr. Knightley: Vanity working on a weak mind produces every kind of mischief.

Shockingly, I had not yet seen this adaptation of Jane Austen’s wonderful novel.

Emma Woodhouse (Gwyneth Paltrow) is rich, beautiful and 21. She keeps house for her kindly but hypochondriac father. A daily visitor to the Woodhouse estate is neighbor Mr. Knightly (Jeremy Northham). As the story begins, Emma is congratulating herself on making a match between her former governess and a wealthy businessman.

Emma is now bored and meets Harriet Smith (Toni Collette), the naive natural daughter of who knows whom. Emma’s next project is to make a match for Harriet. She quickly persuades Harriet to reject the marriage proposal of a prosperous farmer and begins to lay a plot to match Harriet with the local vicar Mr. Elton. This fails disastrously.

I don’t want to spoil the nifty plot for anyone so will stop here except to say that it takes a while for Emma to get over herself. The fun is seeing how she gets there. With Ewan McGregor as Frank Churchill.

I love the book and I really enjoyed this film. Paltrow does well and Toni Collette is hilarious. The only nit I would pick is that Northam seems too young to play Mr. Knightley but he is so appealing I didn’t mind much.

Rachel Portman won the Academy Award for Best Original Score, the first woman to do so. The film was nominated for Best Costume Design.

Lone Star (1996)

Lone Star
Directed by John Sayles
Written by John Sayles
1996/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation/Castle Rock Entertainment/Rio Dulce

First viewing
#1279 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die (combined list – 2013 ver.)
IMDb users say 7.5/10; I say 8.0/10

[box] Otis Payne: It’s not like there’s a line between the good people and the bad people. It is not like you’re one or the other.[/box]

I enjoyed this haunting story about a man coming to terms with his past as he investigates a decades old murder near the Rio Grande.

Nobody in Rio County, Texas has a bad word to say about the late Buddy Deems (Matthew McConanaughey) (“what a real Texan ought to be”) or his wife (“a saint”).  Buddy’s son Sam (Chris Cooper) is not so sure.  When Sam returns to Rio County after a divorce, he is elected sheriff but few think he can fill Buddy’s shoes.

As the film begins, two Army surveyors find a human skull, sheriff’s badge, and Masonic ring on an old firing range.  Later they find a .45 caliber bullet.  Sam becomes convinced that these are remnants of the body of corrupt, vicious ex-sheriff Charlie Wade (Kris Kristofferson) who disappeared before his father became sheriff.  Wade was the prototypical redneck bully, particularly targeting blacks and Mexican-Americans.  Sam sets out to prove that Buddy murdered Wade.  His investigation takes him to Mexico and San Antonio. The true story is told during the course of the film in a series of flashbacks.

Lone Star 3

In the meantime, Sam is also pursuing his now-widowed high school sweetheart Pilar (Elizabeth Peña). Pilar has a complicated relationship with her mother Mercedes who owns a local cafe.  We also follow the story of Otis, who own a saloon catering to African-Americans on the nearby Army base.  Otis’s son, a colonel, has just been appointed commander of the base but has been estranged from his father for years.  Otis’s grandson feels domineered by his spit-and-polish father and longs for a connection with his grandfather.

All these threads are resolved in unexpected ways.

On one level this is a mystery in a Western setting but on a deeper level it is about the pernicious effects of secrets and about inter-generational, interracial and intercultural relations on the Texas-Mexico border.  John Sayles’s Oscar-nominated screenplay cuts deep into the hearts of his characters.  The acting is superb.  I have always been a fan of Chris Cooper and he is outstanding here.  This one snuck by my radar when it was out in theaters and I was very glad to catch up with it.

Trailer, which does not begin to capture the texture of the film