Film Fix: Rachel Getting Married
In Rachel Getting Married, Jonathan Demme straddles the possibilities available to a big-time director who is also fiercely independent. Kylie Boltin reviews the film.

- 1 Comment | Join the discussion
Rachel Getting Married is the most recent feature by maverick director, Jonathan Demme – the longstanding stalwart of the New York film industry. Demme’s career has seen him as the director behind such big budget films as Silence of the Lambs (1991) – for which he won an Academy Award for Best Director, Philadelphia (1993) and The Manchurian Candidate (2004). He is also the luminary behind one of the most respected the music documentaries of all time, Stop Making Sense (1984) and the moving documentary about the late Haitian radio journalist and human rights activist, Jean Dominique, The Agronomist (2003).
In Rachel Getting Married, Demme straddles the possibilities available to a big-time director who is also fiercely independent. Written by first time scriptwriter, Jenny Lumet (daughter of Sidney Lumet, grand-daughter of Lena Horne), shot on multiple Sony HDV, the film shares a lot with the observational filmmaking style mastered by Demme in his rock documentaries about Talking Heads and Neil Young. In fact, at times throughout Rachel you could be forgiven for thinking that you had paid admission for a cinema vérité concert held in your neighbour's back yard – such is the extent that the handheld, cut and paste ‘coverage’ of music plays in this film.
At the same time, Demme can attract an actress with the mainstream pull of Anne Hathaway to play the troubled Kym – long-term, now recovering, addict. After 10 years in rehab, Kym returns to the family home in Connecticut for her elder sister Rachel's wedding. Rachel is played flawlessly by actress-to-watch, Rosemarie DeWitt (soon to be seen in the Diablo Cody penned, United States of Tara).
Will this be the film that Hathaway is remembered for? It will certainly be one of them. Her role is unrecognisable from those she has largely become known for – most recently as Emma, opposite Kate Hudson’s Liv in the throw-away-but-fun, Bride Wars (Gary Winick, 2009).
As Kym, Hathaway’s underlying sadness is palpable. Hers is an understated but exceptionally strong performance. She delivers Lumet’s complex characterisation with grace — aggressively when called for and with droll humour when required. It’s a fabulous performance in an unlikely role that will surely spark other similarly inspired casting if the A-list actress has the opportunity and/or inclination.
For contemporary music fans, of note is Tunde Adebimpe who plays Rachel’s fiancé, Sidney — a gentle man, fanatical about music. Adebimpe’s ‘real life’ role as member of New York-based band TV on the Radio, is put to good use by Demme with Adebimpe singing Neil Young’s ‘Unknown Legend’ as part of his wedding vows. His performance is matched by DeWitt who was instructed by Demme to write her character’s vows – such is his quest for realism!
Comments (1)
Hathaway's best?
Hathaway was great in this film. For my money, it's her best performance to date ... the first time she has truly immersed herself in a gritty, substantial character role. Good film, but, damn, those wedding scenes started to get tedious after a while! Perhaps it was my frame of mind ... the day I saw the film was a bit of an ordeal - which, incidentally, you can read about here: http://www.eurekastreet.com.au/article.aspx?aeid=11838
Join the discussion
PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.
Most Popular
- Review: 'Australia' is a crib note to history, for international auds (97)
- Kubrick Week on SBS (34)
- Australian Movie Season: 'Noise' (32)
- Shaw Bros special (22)
- 2010 cinema’s worst ever year? (20)
- Action... (19)
- George Lucas is mad! (17)
- French Film Festival (16)
- On SBS: Danish Film Season (10)
- Dumb Hollywood movies? It’s ‘our’ fault. (10)
About this Blog
Comprehensive and unbiased coverage of independent global cinema. This is the place to discuss the films that you love, and to discover new favourites.
World Movies
Other Blogs
TV
- Living Black
- Italian Food Safari
- Thalassa
- Luke Nguyen's Vietnam
- Behind the Scenes: The 2009 Deadly Awards
- My Family Feast
- Costa's Production Blog
- Eurovision 2011
- Swift and Shift Couriers
- Global Village
- My Bogan Diary
- The Road to the White House
Food
Films
Documentary
- Britt Arthur
- Catharine Lumby
- John Birmingham
- Rory Medcalf
- Mark Jones
- Emily Booth
- Bob Wurth
- Andy Martin
World News Australia
- Ricardo's Business
- 180 degrees
- Reporters' Blog
- The Hashtag
- The Other World Game
- Window on Africa
- Pop, Cultured
- PJ's Notebook
- The Sweet Spot
- Back of the.net
- Source Code
- The Road to 2012
- Candid Canberra
Sport
- The Circus
- The Interchange
- The Hangover
- Lip Service
- Deep in the Dust: On the Dakar trail
- Dakar Dreams
- The Finktank
- Open Season
About SBS
Business
Internet and Technology
Cycling Central
- Rochelle Gilmore
- Matthew Price's Broom Wagon
- Anthony Tan's Velo Files
- Matthew Keenan
- Al Hinds
- Sophie Smith
- Philip Gomes
- Scott Sunderland
- Mike Tomalaris
Thu 24 May 2012 | 

Email to friend
Print
Enlarge text







top
Blog Home 

19 Feb 2009 14:53 AEST
Tim Kroenert
From: Richmond