TheDudeAbides
Posts: 783
Joined: 15/1/2006 From: In the neighbourhood, feeling a bit daffy.
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To start things off: 50) Glenn Close as the Marquise de Merteuil Dangerous Liaisons, 1988 spoilers herein... Glenn Close emanates ice in this beautiful rendering of Laclos' 1782 novel of aristocratic intrigue, absolutely inhabiting the fearsomely clever aristocrat Merteuil, who joins with Malkovich's scheming seducer Valmont to manipulate society's young ingenues for their amusement. Alternately falsely sweet and coolly despicable, she brings the book's character to life perfectly - critically, Close is unnervingly convicing when she adopts her friendly persona rather than hammily overdoing it as many actors end up doing when playing a duplicitous character. We can completely see why Mme de Volanges would entrust her sheltered daughter Cecile (Uma Thurman) to her care, yet beneath this superficial warmth a steady, unwavering chill is constantly lurking. Merteuil is a woman who wants revenge on the society which created her, and Close captures her hardened contempt for those who surround her to a tee. The final scenes, in which Merteuil's elaborate schemes fall down around her and she learns of the death of Valmont, the closest she has to a friend, are enthralling as she breaks down in frustration and rage, the only way her twisted psychology can process grief. As she sits before the mirror at the film's close, slowly and symbolically wiping off her thick make-up to reveal a plain woman's face, the coldness in her eyes fascinatingly begins to waver... and then we cut to black. That is all we see of Merteuil's true nature, and in just a few moments Close makes it unforgettable.
< Message edited by TheDudeAbides -- 14/6/2010 10:43:32 PM >
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Reviews, film chat and the like at http://resilientlittlemuscle.blogspot.com The Oxford Student - proud home of a film section somewhere between Siskel and Ebert: http://oxfordstudent.com/?cat=11 "Hammy is a stretch, I personally think he was just over zealous." - IMDb reviewer on Dick Powell "Good night, Papa. Machs gut."
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