ADVERTISEMENT

Hysteria

Share This
+ Comment
2

Credits: Directed by Tanya Wexler and starring Hugh Dancy, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Rupert Everett, Jonathan Pryce, Felicity Jones, Ashley Jensen and Sheridan Smith.

Details: (M), 100 mins, In Cinemas 12 July 2012, United Kingdom / France / Germany / Luxembourg, English

Synopsis: Based on a true story. 1880. Mortimer Granville (Hugh Dancy) is a young doctor disillusioned by his colleagues' medieval practices. He starts working for Dr. Dalrymple (Jonathan Pryce), who treats cases of the female ailment commonly known as hysteria by offering them intimate manual relief. Demand becomes so great that Dalrymple and Mortimer cannot keep up with 'curing' women. To keep Mortimer working, Dalrymple promises him his business, and the hand of his beautiful young daughter (Felicity Jones). But when Mortimer falls for Dalrymple's older daughter, the feisty thirty-year feminist (Maggie Gyllenhaal) who runs a women's refuge in east London, his future looks doubtful. In desperation, he invents a machine that will at least solve his medical challenges – the world's first vibrator.

Genres: Comedy, Romance

more details

Story of vibrator's invention fails to satisfy. 

Save for some convincing period detail, nothing about the film rings true

Have you seen that Greg Kinnear film, Flash of Genius? It’s a beautifully made dramatic true story about American inventor Robert Kearns, whose creativity and drive led him to make a discovery that had a profound effect on millions of people. Kearns, you see, was the man who invented the intermittent windshield wiper.

If one needed any further proof that the international film industry is still a boys’ club, you don’t need to look any further than how serious Marc Abraham’s social drama was in comparison to the silly, shrill treatment of a similarly influential invention in Tanya Wexler’s Hysteria. The invention in question is the world’s most popular self-pleasuring accessory for women, the vibrator.

Five writers – all of them male – conspire to tell the story of young upstart physician Mortimer Granville (a twitchy, insipid Hugh Dancy), whose forward-thinking views on the latest medical theories do not sit well with the Victorian-era London establishment. Almost destitute, he accepts a job with well-to-do practitioner Dr. Robert Dalrymple (Jonathan Pryce), a traditionalist making a nice penny treating women diagnosed with ‘hysteria’ but who are suffering from what is clearly, in modern parlance, sexual frustration.

Dalrymple views it in different terms, in keeping with the prudishness of the period, but his methods are quite modern: he manually stimulates the women until they experience what he terms ‘a paroxysm’. In line with the overall ‘nudge-nudge-wink-wink’ tweeness of the film, these scenes are played for cheap laughs, like when a Spanish opera singer breaks into boisterous song mid-stimulation, or a spinster knocks the good doctor to the ground with an involuntary climactic kick.

Granville assumes Dalrymple’s duties but his wrist and finger muscles can’t keep up with the demands of the booming business. It is quite by accident that, while visiting his eccentric friend Edmund St. John-Smythe (Rupert Everett), he stumbles upon a device that may be able to do the work his tendons can no longer perform. The resultant success he achieves sees him soar in the circles of high society, his ascension to the upper crust forged on the back of women who are on their backs.

The subplot is a romantic triangle involving Granville and Dalrymple’s two daughters: snooty daddy’s girl Emily (Felicity Jones) and feisty firebrand Charlotte (Maggie Gyllenhaal). The miscast American actress overplays the latter role, compensating for her underwritten part with lots of screen time. Charlotte boisterously favours a classless society and takes a reactionary stance against her father’s staid ways. Her character is clearly a means to link the invention of the vibrator with the early days of the women’s liberation movement. However, in using Charlotte as its figurehead, Hysteria hardly presents a convincing argument.

It’s a terrible shame that the back-story to one of the most influential personal devices of the last 100 years was told with such puerile pedantry. Save for some convincing period detail, nothing about the film rings true. In fact, if I may indulge in the script’s overall reliance upon smuttiness, Hysteria rubbed me the wrong way.

ADVERTISEMENT
Watch Films Online
Films on SBS TV
Thursday, 23rd May
00:10
Estomago: A Gastronomic Story
After landing a job in a diner to pay for his meal, a tramp proves to be a talented cook as he works his way up in the hospitality world and falls for a prostitute who is taken with his culinary skills. A multi-award winning film, including the 2009 Cinema Brazil Grand Prize for Best Film. Directed by Marcos Jorge and stars Joao Miguel, Fabiula Nascimento and Babu Santana. (From Brazil, in Portuguese) (Drama) (2007) (Rpt) MAV (N,L,S,N)
Friday, 24th May
23:05
Manual Of Love 2
Monica Bellucci leads a host of good-looking Italian actors in this heart-warming, comical anthology of four interconnected tales of love. A radio DJ invites listeners to call in and tell their love stories. What follows are the stories of four different kinds of relationships. Directed by Giovanni Veronesi and also stars Carlo Verdone, Riccardo Scamarcio and Sergio Rubini. (From Italy, in Italian) (Romantic Comedy) (2007) (Rpt) M (S,L,N,V)
00:45
Empire Of The Wolves
Jean Reno stars in this fast paced action thriller in the vein of The Bourne Identity. Two police officers scour the underworld of Paris to investigate a series of brutal murders. The case leads them to a mysterious Turkish far-right group called the Grey Wolves. Directed by Chris Nahon, and also stars Arly Jover and Jocelyn Quivrin. (From France, in French and Turkish) (Thriller) (2005) (Rpt) MAV (V)
Saturday, 25th May
21:30
Snowtown
Based on true events, 16-year-old Jamie falls in with his mother's new boyfriend and his crowd of self-appointed neighbourhood watchmen, a relationship that leads to a spree of torture and murder. Winner of six Australian Film Institute awards in 2012, including Best Direction. Directed by Justin Kurzel and stars Lucas Pittaway, Bob Adriaens and Louise Harris. (From Australia) (Mystery/Crime) (2011) MAV (A,V,L) CC
23:45
Out Of The Blue
A powerful and haunting film based on the Aramoana massacre of 1990 where local recluse David Gray shot 13 people dead before going into hiding on the outskirts of the small New Zealand seaside village. As he stalked his victims the terrified and confused residents were trapped in the village for 24 hours while a handful of under-resourced and underarmed local policemen risked their lives trying to find him and save the survivors. Directed by Robert Sarkies and stars Karl Urban, Matthew Sunderland and Lois Lawn. (From New Zealand) (Drama) (2006) (Rpt) MAV (V)
Sunday, 26th May
23:45
Noise
The community is left reeling after a multiple shooting on a suburban train in Melbourne's inner-west. A young cop, beset with doubt and afflicted with tinnitus, is pitched into the chaos that follows this tragic event. He struggles to clear the noises in his head while all around him deal with the fallout of the crime. Nominated for the Grand Jury Prize (World Cinema) at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Directed by Matthew Saville and stars Brendan Cowell, Maia Thomas and Henry Nixon. (From Australia) (Drama) (2007) (Rpt) MA (V,L) CC
Monday, 27th May
00:05
Death Note
A law student, disillusioned by the justice system, gets hold of a mystical notebook that gives him the power to kill by writing down a victim's name. He starts to bring criminals to justice himself by killing them using the notebook. A dark fantasy based on a successful manga series that was a huge box office success in Japan. Directed by Shusuke Kaneko and stars Tatsuya Fujiwara, Asaka Seto and Kenichi Matsuyama. (From Japan, in Japanese) (Thriller) (2006) (Rpt) M (H,V)
Wednesday, 29th May
23:10
Caramel
Lebanon's official entry at the 2008 Academy Awards takes a vibrant and intricate look at the lives and relationships of five Christian and Muslim women who work at, and frequent, a Beirut beauty salon. Directed by and stars Nadine Labaki. Also stars Yasmine Al Masri, Joanna Moukarzel and Gisele Aouad. (From France, in Arabic) (Drama) (2007) (Rpt) M (A)
00:55
Sympathy For Lady Vengeance
Beautiful Lee Guem-ja is finally out of jail after thirteen years imprisonment for the kidnap and murder of a six-year-old boy. She can now start to seek revenge on the man who was really responsible for the boy's death. But will her actions lead to the relief she seeks? Nominated for Best Asian Film at the 2006 Hong Kong Film Awards. Directed by Park Chan-wook and stars Lee Yeong-ae, Choi Min-sik and Tony Barry. (From South Korea, in Korean) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) MAV (V,S)
Thursday, 30th May
00:05
Grbavica
A powerful, understated look at post-war Sarajevo with a single mother's struggle to survive her personal demons and raise a teenage daughter in a city broken and scarred by conflict. Winner of the Golden Bear at the 2006 Berlin International Film Festival. Directed by Jasmila Zbanic and stars Mirjana Karanovic, Luna Mijovic and Leon Lucev. (From Germany, in Bosnian) (Drama) (2006) (Rpt) MA (L)
ADVERTISEMENT
SBS Film Guide to...
Australian Film Season: SBS ONE

Celebrate Australian filmmaking with this home-grown season. Starts May 25.

Saturday Cult Movie: SBS 2

A month of movies with an edge. Saturday nights in April.

SBS ONE Film schedule: Sandy George presents

Movies are back in primetime on Saturday nights, presented by Sandy George.

ADVERTISEMENT
The Fabric of the Cosmos (DVD)
The Fabric of the Cosmos (DVD)

A mind-blowing new exploration of space, time, and the very nature of reality.

Carla Bruni - Little French Songs (CD)
Carla Bruni - Little French Songs (CD)

A sensitive and seductive return to the limelight, written and performed in French and Italian.