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Martha Fiennes’ “Onegin” is probably the most under-appreciated movie
released in 2000. It had a short-lived, limited theatrical run and then it
quickly became available on video. The sad truth is that it’s the best film
of the year and completely worthy of Oscar attention, which, if judging by
its current state of obscurity, it won’t get.
“Onegin”, starring Ralph Fiennes [the director’s brother] and Liv Tyler, is
based on “Evgeny Onegin”, the classic novel by Alexander Pushkin, written in
the mid-nineteenth century, also known as the “Russian century” due to the
incredible output of great literature by Russians during that time. The book
is among the greatest ever written and if you have read it you probably
agree.
Faithful to the novel, the movie centers on the life of the title character
[played by Ralph Fiennes] - a disillusioned and cynical nobleman, bored by
the sophistication and snobbery of life in the city and amused by the
eagerness of the provincial aristocracy to reach the level of fakeness of
their city counterparts. When Onegin’s uncle dies, he becomes the sole
inheritor of a rather large feudal estate in the country, lands and serfs
included. He takes over the property and plays with the idea of tasting life
in the country for a while, a notion that horrifies even his city accustomed
personal servant. Onegin makes his acquaintance with a local young poet, who
’s engaged to one of the neighboring family’s two daughters. Being a
nobleman from the city, he causes quite a stir among his new wealthy but
provincial neighbors and becomes a target for their dinner and party
invitations.
And this is how Onegin meets Tatyana [Liv Tyler], the neighbors’ other
daughter, who unlike her sister is a sensitive and well-read girl
comfortable with life in the country. Tatyana is immediately fascinated by
the honesty with which Onegin, being the kind of man never to hold back,
expresses his contemptuous opinions regarding city life snobbery. Remember,
this was a time when it was a sign of fine manners to converse in French
when one found oneself in appropriate circles.
Tatyana’s declaration of love is quickly rejected by Onegin’s cynical
arguments: Love leads to marriage; love is short-lived and then is replaced
by deception. Then quite unintentionally, Onegin, always brutally honest in
his speech, hurts the pride of the overly sensitive young poet and is
challenged to a duel which results in the latter’s premature death. Shaken
by the waste of life, Onegin decides to travel the world.
Cut to six years later. Onegin has returned to Saint Petersburg where he
finds Tatyana, now married to a prince and herself a princess, transformed
into a stunning society lady. Obsessed with her new image and social status,
he professes his love for her, only to be given a hard proof that deception
does not always exist in marriage, even if it’s a loveless one. Even in the
name of a greater love. The irony of broken hearts...
The performances by both Ralph Fiennes and Liv Tyler are sumptuous and the
best of their careers. The screenplay by Michael Ignatieff and Peter
Ettedgui is a first class version of the novel. Martha Fiennes’s direction
is classy and sure-handed and it marks the arrival of a director whose
future work is to be looked forward to.
Luben Omaiski
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