
An Awfully Big Adventure
1995, 1080hd
Scoop's comments: (TOTAL SPOILERS)
Director Mike Newell and
star Hugh Grant has quite a solid international hit in
1994 with Four Weddings and Funeral, so they
immediately attempted to recapture their chemistry
with another film in 1995. This one. Unfortunately,
their collaboration was missing an integral element,
the talented author of Four Weddings, Richard Curtis,
who is one of the most successful screenwriters in
modern British history, having written or co-written
the Bridget Jones films, Notting Hill, Love Actually,
and most of the Blackadder series. Instead of one of
Curtis's light romances, Grant and Newell selected a
dark, cynical and profoundly gloomy drama. Probably
the wrong choice.
When it comes to coming-of-age films, the difference
between comedy and tragedy is only a matter of
shading. Both are about the loss of innocence, and
that is inherently sad in some inevitable ways, but
the distinction between them lies in the way the
innocence is lost and the degree to which one may some
day view its loss with fondness. An Awfully Big
Adventure is not about the mere loss of innocence, but
its utter destruction. Two students, one of each
gender, take internships at a theater company in
Liverpool after the war. They will both learn of the
world's cruelties before the theater season is over.
The 16-year-old girl will lose her virginity to the
fading leading man. The boy will lose his to the
company's cruel, arrogant director.
You think that sounds depressing? It gets worse. The
leading man has only returned to the tiny provincial
theater to allow himself a chance to look for the true
love of his life, whom he romanced and lost there many
years before, and the son he believes they had
together. Are you sitting down? He doesn't find the
woman, but he does discover the identity of his child.
It is not a son, but a daughter. Do I need to explain
further? When he discovers that his careless
sexual escapades have made him not only a pedophile,
but an incestuous one as well, he ... well, let's just
say it keeps getting more and more dismal.
The boy's half of the story is not as thoroughly
developed, but it isn't any cheerier. All of the
atmospheric and characteristic details are profoundly
depressing as well. The theater is run-down, the city
outside its walls is bleak, all and the players are
broken-down. After all, the entire story takes place
in an impoverished theater group in Liverpool, so the
players and crew are basically cast-offs: underpaid
wannabes, alcoholic has-beens, and never-weres who
take the abuse of the heartless director because they
have no place else to go.
Cheery stuff.
I can't give you many good reasons to watch it. The occasional attempts at humor
often seem sadly inappropriate, making the film
even more cheerless than if it had no humor at
all. Hugh Grant is suitably
despicable as the director, but his character seems
utterly one-dimensional and full of tics. Alan Rickman
is excellent, as he always is, and his forlorn actor
would be a sympathetic character with only slight
changes in the plot, but as it stands he's playing an
incestuous pedophile, so it's difficult to feel that
he got any worse than he deserved. The innocent girl
is obviously damaged goods to begin with, and the
theater world damages her still further, while
shattering her dreams along with her innocence, so we
should feel her pain, but even that is difficult given
that (1) she is a very strange girl (2) the
melodramatic situations are such blatant attempts to
evoke sympathy that we expect her at any moment to get
tied to a log and conveyed into the sawmill.
Well,
I guess I could come up with one reason to watch it.
How about Hugh Grant as Captain Hook?
Despite what I wrote above, I don't
agree with some of the low scores awarded by the
critics. It isn't a bad movie, just an unpleasant
one.
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More interesting than the film is the story of how
Georgina Cates got the role of the 16-year-old
Liverpudlian. Ya see, there is no such person as
Georgina Cates. Her real name is Claire Woodgate, and
at the time this film was cast, she was 20, and had
long been a semi-famous juvenile BBC actress hailing
from Essex. As herself, she auditioned for this role
and was rejected. Refusing to take no for an answer,
she went home, changed her appearance significantly,
and created a new identity - the unknown Georgina
Cates, an untrained and inexperienced 16 year old from
Liverpool, complete with scouse accent. In essence,
she created an actress who would have been perfect for
the role without acting! She auditioned again and got
the part. She did not admit the ruse until about
halfway through the filming, at which point the
tabloid press fell in love with her, but her fellow
industry insiders were dismayed by behavior that they
thought to be unprofessional.
Cates continued to march to her own drummer. Having
alienated some key contacts in the British film world,
she packed her bags and headed off to Hollywood, where
she got some fairly good notices in Illuminata, and
some great praise for Clay Pigeons. There's no doubt
the girl can act. Hell, even her famous scam proved
she could act. After all, she convinced the casting
director that she was a 16 year old from Liverpool,
and that's exactly what she had to do in the movie!
The very fact that she got the job proved that she
could do it well.
So what has she done with her talent, and why have you
not heard anything from her recently? She just turned
her back on the whole thing. Between 1998 and 2013 she
appeared in exactly one movie. She married Skeet
Ulrich, she had twins, and concentrated on her private
life.
She is now divorced from the Skeetmeister and her
twins are high school age (and appearing in movies),
so she occasionally appears in a movie. Most recently
she had a pretty big part in the Johnny Knoxville
flick, Bad Grandpa (2016).
Georgina
Cates film clip (collages below)
Carol
Drinkwater film clip (sample below)
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