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After years of slowly
dying on the vine under the beating glare of annoyed film critics and frustrated fans,
Woody Allen has finally redeemed himself with Match Point, which is charming,
intriguing, spell-binding. For the first time, there is no Woody Allen stand-in character.
More amazingly, the film is set in London rather than New York. And it is instructive to
see which parts of London culture and British society Allen enlists to tell this sometimes
Hollywood noir thriller, sometimes Dostoevskian philosophical tale. Scarcely a scene takes
place without Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, who plays the Irish social climber landed among
Londons highest and finest.
Match Point is a tale well told, all else is subservient to
this. Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers) is a professional tennis player, turned
instructor. He has gotten himself hired at one of Londons most exclusive clubs,
evidently to mine its membership for some golden opportunities. Wilton is an agile artiste
of a social climber and knows how to play his luck. His very first tennis student, Tom
Hewett (Matthew Goode), takes a liking to the smooth-talking Irishman, inviting him into
his home and his familys inner circle, which includes money, professional
connections and a marriageable sister, Chloe(Emily Mortimer).
For the poor, life is tragic, but for the wealthy, as Tom, Chloe
and their parents Alec (Brian Cox) and Eleanor (Penelope Wilton) demonstrate, life is
something to embrace with love, a white thing with feathers. Indeed, they are all so
untroubled because wealth always buffers their sort from any real consequences. The
Hewetts seem not so much easy prey to Wiltons designs, but willing to go along for
the rideWilton is a likable sort, and brings a bit of spice into their genteel
routine.
Chris, however, is very hungry. Even as he continues to insinuate
himself into the Hewett family and becomes engaged to Chloe, he is incapable of resisting
his appetite for another poor social-climber, Nola (Scarlett Johansson), a Colorado-born,
neurotic aspiring actressand Toms fiancee. Nola is far more desperate and
clawing, far more vulnerable, and with far fewer natural gifts to protect her she is far
more naked in her need than Chris. And Chris, of course, cant resist pushing his
luck to see how far it will take him. While American audiences may see in Nola a parody of
a modern designing woman, she is pure Zola, a victim of things much bigger than the
thwarted ambition of a mediocre talent.
Match Point feels very much like a Bergman film, its narrative
inventiveness and fairy-tale qualities evoke Fanny
and Alexander in particular. (Match Point stands apart from Allens
oeuvre much as Fanny and Alexander does from Bergmans oeuvre.) Match Point
claims to be about ambition and obsession, which it is, but, more to the point, it
examines the often overlooked but all-important role luck plays in determining outcomes.
Just as the poor and wealthy have no control over what social class they have been born
into, what a person desires (ambition) or who a person desires (obsession) is every bit as
random and subject to the amoral forces of the universe. It is not for nothing that early
in the film Chris bones up on his Dostoevsky (one of many tacks to impress his superiors
as a cultured autodidact).
"Hard work is a given," Chris says at one point. In a tip
of the hat, Allen has Wilton, who turns out to be a natural for corporate politics, deny
that he is extremely aggressive. As he deftly counters, "I am naturally
competitive." Little doe he know the film will turn into Crime
and Punishment, and that his killer instinct will prove his best, fortuitously
bestowed natural gift.
- Les Wright