While
this film wasn’t the knockout I was anticipating, it’s incredibly well-made and
definitely worth watching. All the
actors do fine work in this beautifully-directed period piece, which immerses
you in the quietly-repressed world they inhabit.
Therese,
an intelligent but undistinguished girl living in 1950s New York, doesn’t know
what’s about to begin when a chance encounter turns her on her head. At the department store where she works,
Therese is drawn to one of her customers, the alluring, soon-to-be divorcee
Carol. Carol is older, wealthier, and
surer of what she wants. Meanwhile,
Carol is just as taken with young, artless Therese. The two start taking small, unspoken steps
toward one another but are thrown together by an unexpected hardship that
besets Carol.
I had a
tricky time pinning this film down. It
looks and sounds gorgeous from beginning to end – director Todd Haynes (who I
know best from Velvet Goldmine) lets
the essence of the period soak into every frame. For me, though, it’s less successful on an
emotional level. The story is an
intimate one, but for the most part, the direction doesn’t feel all that
intimate. This is a movie that feels
like it’s holding you at arm’s length, which made it difficult for me to
connect with the characters.
However,
I think much of this is probably intentional.
In this time and place, among Carol’s class, women weren’t free to love in
the open, and so much of the connection between Carol and Therese is
understated, implied, both characters stopping just shy of where it seems they
want to go. In a situation like that,
it’s vital for a film to convey the desire simmering underneath the polite
phrases and carefully-arranged distance, and at times, it does so
wonderfully. This element comes through
at different points in the film, always to good effect, but I feel it most
strongly in a scene where both women are in the car and Therese is stealing
glances at Carol. We see only pieces of
them in extreme close-ups – lips, hands, eyes – and it creates the sense that
Therese is just skimming the surface of Carol because she’s not yet sure how to
go further. Unfortunately, there are
stretches of the movie where this tug between inward and outward appearances
isn’t very apparent, which makes the film feel kind of remote.
This
distance carries over into the acting as well, although I think both (Oscar-nominated)
leading ladies do what they can to reach us with the characters despite
that. As Carol, Cate Blanchett probably
has the tougher job, since Carol is less a character in her own right and more
a reflection of how Therese perceives her.
In scenes with her daughter, her (impending) ex-husband, and a
friend/former lover, Carol feels better-realized than she does with Therese,
where her characterization can sometimes get lost in being “mysterious and
alluring Carol.” Rooney Mara does well
with Therese; she’s quiet and sensitive without being milquetoast, and she
nicely portrays Therese’s gradual education and awakening. Kyle Chandler is highly effective in the
unflattering role of Carol’s husband, and Sarah Paulson, playing Carol’s best
friend, lends an earnest, down-to-earth air to every scene she’s in.
Warnings
Drinking,
smoking, language, thematic elements, and sexual content (including one sex
scene.)
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