MOVIE REVIEW
When 'The Advocate' Goes to Trial in the Middle Ages
By PETER RAINER, TIMES STAFF WRITER
Los Angeles Times Wednesday
August 24, 1994 Home Edition Calendar, Page 8 Type of Material: Motion
Picture Review
Richard Courtois (Colin
Firth), the Parisian lawyer in "The Advocate," is a medieval post-yuppie.
Forsaking the big bad city for the villagey environs of Abbeville, he looks
forward to defending the grateful peasantry and getting all idyllic.
But lawyer-haters will
be glad to know that lawyers had it bad back then too. It turns out that
Courtois underestimates how grody these villages (and villagers) can be.
Abbeville is ruled by the Seigneur (Nicol Williamson), a merchant who specializes
in pinched smiles and glazed gazes. He purchased his title--it's kind of
like buying a black belt in karate--and the rule of law along with it.
His prosecutor, Pincheon (Donald Pleasence), has that groggy, on-the-payroll
look. When he squares off with Courtois in court, it's a tossup to see
if he'll nod off before Courtois storms off.
What is it about Middle
Ages movies that almost always provoke giggles? Maybe it's the way all
that clanking and posturing clashes with modern acting styles. Maybe it's
because Monty Python has made it just about impossible to look at the 15th
Century on film without expecting John Cleese to totter about in armor.
"The Advocate," written and directed by Leslie Megahey, makes the mistake
of taking itself seriously--but not quite seriously enough. It makes a
fuss about the conflict between civil and religious law, it tries for a
You Were There quality. It keeps flashing title cards, for that Important
Movie effect.
But it also seems as
campy as those old Roger Corman Edgar Allan Poe pictures, with Williamson
in the Vincent Price role. Courtois just happens to be boarding in what
turns out to be a sort of hostel-brothel, which provides the opportunity
for some explicit medieval nookie. Cleavage was big back then. There's
also the requisite banquet eating scenes, with platters of cooked game
and a sultry (is there any other kind?) Gypsy girl doing a dance of veils.
You half expect Victor Mature and Anita Ekberg to show up. When Courtois
and the Gypsy (Amina Annabi) have one of those it-can-never-be-I-am-not-of-your-world
romances, we wait for the inevitable A Part of Me Stays With You parting.
The underpinnings of
the plot concern the fact that, under medieval law, everything created
by God was subject to his laws. So we're subjected to scenes in which Courtois
calls rats to testify in a murder trial, but not the Jewish surgeon, without
rights in this world, who discovered the body. (You half expect him to
bemoan, "Hath not a Jew whiskers?")
It's not always clear
if Megahey is aware of how risible this stuff is--if he was, why didn't
he just turn it into a comedy? The actors do their best to keep their faces
uncracked, but Williamson has a high old time acting parched and smarmy,
Pleasence is ingratiatingly rheumy, and Firth holds the screen even when
there's nothing to hold (which is often).
Ian Holm plays a priest
who unofficially disbelieves the village's superstitions, and he's good
enough to make you wish he was in something more amenable to his talents--like
Shakespeare. Lysette Anthony, who was Sydney Pollack's airheaded squeeze
in Woody Allen's "Husbands and Wives," is lively, with a bright, quacking
laugh, in her role as the Seigneur's unmarriageable daughter.
You may have noticed
that the ads for "The Advocate" are dredging up that old "don't tell the
secret" chestnut from "Crying Game" fame. (Miramax released both.) Audiences
and critics are supposed to keep quiet about who the Courtois' chief client
is. Miramax would be wiser encouraging audiences and critics to refrain
from revealing how mediocre the film is.
Since the identity of
the client would appear to be the film's biggest--only--selling point,
the marketing ploy seems particularly dunderheaded. And since, in any event,
the identity is signaled from the opening credits, and revealed not long
after, this "secret" business seems like a not terribly subtle way of coercing
the press into pumping up the film's wanna-see quotient.
But we'll play along
anyway. We just wanted to you to know that this ham-fisted attempt to squelch
squealers is not strictly kosher.
* MPAA
rating: R, for elements of strong sexuality. Times guidelines: It includes
fairly graphic sex scene and shots of plague victims.
'The Advocate'
Colin Firth: Richard
Courtois
Amina Annabi: Samira
Donald Pleasence: Pincheon
Nicol Williamson: The
Seigneur
A Miramax presentation.
Director Leslie Megahey. Producer David Thompson. Executive producer Michael
Waring. Screenplay by Leslie Megahey. Cinematographer John Hooper. Editor
Isabelle Dedieu. Costumes Anna Buruma. Art director Bruce Macadie. Running
time: 1 hour, 51 minutes.
* In limited release
at the Laemmle's Sunset 5, Sunset at Crescent Heights, West Hollywood;
(213) 848-3500.
Modern day debate: Counterpunch:
A Pair of Advocates for 'The Advocate'
Copyright,
The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times, 1994.
Copyright © 1995-1996 Infonautics
Corporation. All rights reserved. |