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April 3, 2000
5 QUESTIONS
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![]() An affair to rememberV Gangadhar
Which brings us to The End Of The Affair, which has war, adultery and a dash of religion as its theme. Based on the semi-autobiographical novel of the same name by English author Graham Greene, The Affair is a better remake of a 1950 version which did not create much of an impact.
Watching The End Of The Affair took me back to the 1950s, when movies were simple, had a story to tell and often told it well. This film was like that. The screenplay was powerful, the dialogue sparkling, bearing the Graham Greene touch. Director Neil Jordan succeeds in creating a wartime London and the photography is excellent. As in all Greene novels, this one has a strong religious streak which has been captured on the screen without any distortion.
Greene's expertise was characterisation. Maurice (Ralph Fiennes), Sarah (Julianne Moore) and Henry (Stephen Rea) are ideally cast. Moore is wonderful as the gentle-hearted woman unable to give up her lover and willing to accept her husband as a 'friend.' Rea has the most difficult role because the novelist has not made it clear why he was incompatible as a husband. "Husbands are ridiculous," he mutters in desperation. We can only agree.
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