2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
When the British were Kings., 23 November 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Ah yes, running in slow motion. We've all done it. To Vangelis's music
from CHARIOTS OF FIRE.
British film, written by Colin Welland, directed by Hugh Hudson,
nominated for 7 Academy Awards, winning 4 (including Best Picture).
CHARIOTS OF FIRE is based loosely on two real life British runners in
the 1924 Paris Olympics, who run for very different reasons - one
against anti-Semitism, one for Christianity.
Harold Abrahams (Ben Cross), runs to win, to prove himself above the
anti-Semitism he's experienced all his life; while Eric Liddell (Ian
Charleson) runs to glorify his Christian god: "To win is to honor Him"
(which should make anyone trip over from laughing so hard. Even in slow
motion).
Movie opens at Caius College Cambridge in 1919, when fervor for The
Great War (though what made it "great" is beyond my ken) is still high
in everyone's nostrils, and British supremacy was a reality in the
world. Most of the British runners all meet here as students.
Different people would perceive different parts of this movie as
inspirational. For an athlete, the running in slow motion, the
sacrifices and the winning - both Liddell and Abrahams would go on to
win their respective races and bring glory to Britain; for a religious
fanatic, the nutty equating of Christ with racing - Liddell gives a
speech loaded with metaphor, "committing yourself to the love of Christ
- that is how you run a straight race" - demonstrably ridiculous,
because Jewish Abrahams ran "straight races" as well, metaphorically as
well as literally - by committing to the love of Allah.
And there are so much of Liddell's ravings and rantings and refusing to
run on Sunday at the Olympics, that it turned me off the film. This
real life athlete ruined a film honoring him because his character
(Charleson) had to portray him as he really was - a lunatic.
Liddell's life plan is to visit China as a missionary, but he puts
those plans on hold to attend the Olympics, because, "I believe that
God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast, and when I run, I
feel His pleasure." Sure you do. Anything as an excuse to rationalize
why you do something fun. After the Games, he does actually give up
running to spread the disease of Christianity in China.
Liddell meets with Olympic and state officials who urge him to compete
in his Sunday race, "In my day, it was king first, God after." Liddell
replies, "God made countries, God makes kings, and the rules by which
they govern." God also makes wars. Reconcile that with your missionary
work, Running Boy - oh, I forgot, missionary work IS insidious war,
after all, on Other People's beliefs.
This is one of those films where it is pointless speaking of the
performances, which are so natural and top notch, it is no wonder
CHARIOTS received so many awards: Ian Holm is Abrahams' trainer, Sir
John Gielgud once again defines Spectacularly Imperious by appearing in
the dictionary right next to the word, and here as a College Master.
Sadly, two young American actors who were stars in their own right
appear here in their last major feature film before virtually
disappearing from cinema, Dennis Christopher (who made his mark as the
determined young bicyclist in BREAKING AWAY, 1979) and Brad Davis (who
shook our foundations in the disturbing MIDNIGHT EXPRESS, 1978).
Watching both Abrahams and Liddell cheer each other on during their
respective races for Britain - though both were mortal running enemies
in Britain - was a joy that no religion could sully; the physicality of
driving human bodies to such extremes of performance; the intricacy of
cardiovascular function that fuels the human animal; the tendons,
joints, muscles, bones impacting the Earth, surging forward in
opposition to gravity; the wonder of the raging human adrenalin machine
stretched past breaking point... If only Liddell could have understood
there is a much more wondrous power than his mythical Christ -
humanity.
Run from the truth, Eric! Run in slow motion!
--Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
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