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First-time director Richard E.
Grant brings to the screen a semi-autobiographical tale of the disintegration of a British
colonial family set against the social backdrop of the collapsing British Empire and the
visual backdrop of the breath-taking Swaziland countryside. The story is told through the
eyes of young Ralph Compton (played by two different actors, Zachary Fox plays Ralph aged
11 and Nicholas Hout as Ralph aged 14). A kind of diplomatic corps Holden Caulfield, Ralph
feels himself to be like one of his growing collection of marionette puppets, manipulated
by hypocritical, dysfunctional adults and forced to play a role he hates. In the petty and
insular society of British Swaziland in the late 1960s, Ralph must cope with alcoholism at
home while protecting the open secrets of his deteriorating family life from the judgment
of local British high society.
His father Harry Compton (Gabriel Byrne), the colonys Minister of
Education, develops an acute drinking problem when cuckolded by his wife Lauren (Miranda
Richardson), who runs off with Harrys best friend John Traherne. Trahernes
abandoned wife, "Auntie" Gwen (Julie Waters, poignant in her role as the
Little-British marital cast-off) carries a torch for Harry, hovering protectively around
young Ralph, aged 11.
When Ralph returns from boarding school, now aged 14, he is confronted
with Harrys new wife, the very Sixties, very American, "former
air-hostess," Ruby (Emily Watson). Watsons Ruby is a breath of fresh air in
stuffy imperial Swaziland, seeing through the pretenses. Not as naive as she at first
seems, Rubys easy-going approach to life belies the difficult changes afoot for
everyone, from the Compton hearth to the British Swazi compound to the international
social revolution of the Sixties.
Ruby loves her new husband, though the film never indicates exactly
why. Her newfangled American egalitarian approach scandalizes the veddy British, veddy
nineteenth-century social matriarchal iron grip of Lady Riva Hardwick (Celia Imrie). After
being blackballed by her ladyship, Ruby deflates the imperial pomp and circumstance,
christening it all "wah-wah," parodying the precious baby-talk of the
elites in-group social language. Using Watsons irresistible likeability and
liberated womans natural leadership, director Grant sweetly undermines the vanity
disguised as social grace and elegance in Celia Imries signature caricature of Lady
Hardwick.
While Gabriel Byrnes thoughtful and heartfelt portrayal of a
disintegrating alcoholic is at the heart of the film, Harrys ability to take
"anti-alcoholic pills" to suddenly stop his alcoholism seems rather too glib.
Such uneven pacing seems a common enough flaw among first-time directors. At times the
scenes and dialogue sometimes deteriorate into camp parody. Much of the time, this appears
to be Grants intention, as a nudge and wink to the audience. But, in spots, Wah-Wah
seems to drift unwillingly into Valley
of the Dolls territory.
Similarly, while the symbolism of Ralphs obsession with hand
puppets conveys a grounded seriousness, the silliness of the outgoing rulers choice
of the Broadway musical Camelot (in honor of a brief visit by Princess Margaret)
spills over into maudlin sentimentalism. For an American audience, Camelot calls to
mind the lost idealism of the Kennedy presidency. And, even if so intended in Wah-Wah,
the film ends on a somewhat unsettled balance between domestic and epic, serious drama and
nostalgic recollectionthis "semi-autobiography" remains a precariously
half-and-half sort of affair.
- Les Wright