Bracingly sharp, Amma Asante’s Belle is a lovely character study and handsome period piece that
navigates its complexities with invigorating intelligence and dexterous
empathy. Set in 18th century England and based on a true story, it tells of
Dido Elizabeth Belle (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), a mixed-race child of Captain Sir John
Lindsay (Matthew Goode). She was raised in his absence by his aunt and uncle,
Lord and Lady Mansfield (Emily Watson and Tom Wilkinson), on a gorgeous estate.
Freed from a life of slavery by virtue of her father’s station in life, she’s
still trapped by the color of her skin.
As she grows older, Dido questions the social order, asking
why she’s too high class to dine with the maids, and yet too low to dine with
guests. Her inheritance gives her independent wealth, a luxury many women,
including her close cousin Elizabeth (Sarah Gadon), do not have. Dido does not
need to marry for rank or income. She’s lucky, and yet stuck. Women are
property no matter the color, not all slaves, but the well-to-do are stuck in a
gilded cage of societal rules and expectations.
The film is stimulating as it gracefully turns circles
around issues of race, gender, and class. It illuminates a time and place,
deftly laying out the reasons for Dido’s circumstances, a rigid social
structure that keeps women and people of color oppressed. Her uncle is the
highest judge in the land, hearing the case of a slave ship that dumped its
human cargo overboard and is now suing their insurers who refuse to compensate
for the damages. Through this legal argument, brought into their house by his
prospective pupil (Sam Reid), Dido is drawn into larger social awareness of the
struggles of people who share her color.
She’s also growing keenly aware of the struggles of her sex,
as she and her cousin are of age to be courted. Her cousin draws the attentions
of a miserable racist wretch (Tom Felton) with a pushy, gossiping mother
(Miranda Richardson), scrabbling to improve their family’s rank through
marriage. Her other son (James Norton) is drawn to Dido, who knows not what to
do with circumstances she was hardly expecting. Together, the girls have the blessing of belonging to a respected family, but Dido's difficulties are unique and hers alone.
It is in many ways a traditional period piece, with
beautiful gowns, ornate sets, a lush orchestral score, and fastidious design, a
dash of Austen romance here, a bit of Dickensian social commentary there. But
Amma Asante’s writing and direction is uncommonly assured, well written,
wonderfully photographed, and briskly paced. It lays out an argument for basic
rights for women and people of color by having its historical characters
grappling with these questions literally and explicitly throughout the course
of the plot. They stand as symbols of the argument – gossiping racists,
sniveling misogynists, noble activists, brooding legal scholars – and yet never
appear to be merely constructs of a debate come to life.
The writing is in a clever, elevated Merchant-Ivory style, wittier and lively, full of
fantastically droll asides, tremendous personality in all the supporting parts
(including a small, choice turn for Penelope Wilton) and rich with evocative
subtext. And the plot and theme go hand in hand, stirring and resonant social
consciousness informed by character every step of the way. And what remarkable
characters! All are colorfully brought to life with fine, full performances
memorable in personality and conflict. Dido, especially, is imbued with great
humanity by Mbatha-Raw, whose performance is wisely situated between privilege
and disadvantage, open curiosity and wounded cynicism, hopeful romance and
pragmatic resignation.
The movie so vividly and convincingly sketches in a portrait
of her world, blessed with wealth and advantage tempered by the prejudice of a
power structure that restricts women’s choices and confined the mother she
never knew to a life of slavery. The filmmaking is tenderly attuned to the
nuances of its lead performance. There’s a remarkable scene in which Dido’s
suitor tells her that she’s so lucky he’s willing to overlook the curse of
color her mother passed down to her. Her eyes well up with the faintest pained
mistiness, and yet her proper smile never quivers or falters.
Assante unfailingly illuminates such breathtaking moments of
emotional and psychological nuance. Unlike 12
Years a Slave, which summoned up detailed historical horror with
unflinching punishment and cruelty, the better to make us wince and feel it, Belle goes about its effect in a
tremendously inviting and empathetic way, making us feel the pointed sting of
rejection, the quick gasp of love, the heartache of internalized oppression. In
a scene late in the picture where Dido dares sneak out to see a man who may love
her for who she is – all of who she
is – there’s a trembling insert shot, no more than a split second, of her neck,
a nervous tensing. Earlier, we saw them meet in a garden, a late night
happenstance that also found another insert shot, a hand on a hip, a sharp
intake of breath.
We see this sharp observation and warm compassion in scenes of dialogue between many combinations of characters in this ensemble as people slowly figure out how best to reconcile their notions of right and wrong with the rules of the society at the time, how best to do the right thing. The movie sits closely, attentively with its characters,
making them flesh and blood human beings treated with understanding and
compassion. In doing so, it casts light not just on history, but on modern
tensions and fears, core dehumanizing inequalities that go by different names,
but linger, no matter how circumstances may have changed in the meantime. I
found the film completely engaging, expressively smart, and deeply moving.
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