Deja Vu |
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![]() Skelly: Vanessa Redgrave Sean: Stephen Dillane Alex: Michael Brandon Claire: Glynis Barber Directed by Henry Jaglom. Written by Jaglom and Victoria Foyt. Running time: 116 minutes. Rated PG-13 (for language, brief sexuality and a scene of drug use). BY ROGER EBERT We all look for love like the love in ``Deja Vu.'' We hardly ever find it. That's why there are movies. We want a love that spans the generations and conquers time, a love so large that only the supernatural can contain it. Here is a movie about a love like that. It makes ``City of Angels'' look timid. The story involves an American woman named Dana (Victoria Foyt), who is on a buying trip to Jerusalem when she is approached by a mysterious older blond who engages her in conversation. Soon she is revealing all her secrets: Yes, she is engaged, because ``being engaged has become a condition of my life,'' but after six years and no marriage she is not very happy. The other woman tells her about Perhaps, Dana says, he could not find you. The woman smiles sadly. ``He knew where to find me. Life had got hold of us.'' She pauses. ``Nothing seemed so real again. In fact, all my life since then has been like a dream.'' The woman gives her a piece of jewelry--a clip--and disappears, after mentioning that the clip was a gift from the GI, who kept the other one. Dana heads toward home. When the
Chunnel train stops briefly at Dover, she inexplicably gets off instead
of going on to London. Above the White Cliffs of Dover, she meets a
painter named Sean (Stephen Dillane). ``Have we met before?'' she asks
him. He Her fiance is Alex (Michael
Brandon). His wife is Claire (Glynis Barber). It becomes clear that Dana
and Sean are helplessly in love, and their |
``Deja
Vu'' is not a weepy romantic melodrama, but a sophisticated film about
smart people. Foyt and Dillane make convincing lovers not because they
are swept away, but because they regard what has happened to them, and
accept it. When they fall in love, there is a lot at risk: jobs,
businesses, which country they live in, the people they're committed to.
It takes no trouble at all to fall in love when you're 20 and single.
But Dana and Sean must look in their hearts and be sure they cannot live
without one another.
The film was directed by Henry In ``Citizen Kane,'' which Welles made in 1941, there occurs my favorite passage of movie dialogue. Old Mr. Bernstein is talking about the peculiarities of time. ``A fellow will remember a lot of things you wouldn't think he'd remember,'' he says. ``You take me. One day, back in 1896, I was crossing over to Jersey on the ferry, and as we pulled out, there was another ferry pulling in, and on it there was a girl waiting to get off. A white dress she had on. She was carrying a white parasol. I only saw her for one second. She didn't see me at all, but I'll bet a month hasn't gone by since that I haven't thought of that girl.'' Late in ``Deja Vu,'' a character tells a similar story, about a woman he once met: ``A week hasn't gone by since I last saw her that I haven't thought of her. She was the love of my life.'' Yes. And can you, dear reader,
think of such a moment, too? Perfect love is Only rarely does the universe wheel around to bring two hearts once again into communion. That's what ``Deja Vu'' is about. And that explains the two most curious characters in it. They are the old couple (Anna Massey and Noel Harrison) who own the house where Dana and Sean meet by accident. They have been married a very long time, and like to read in bed, and eat Mars bars at the same time, and be happy to be together. At first you wonder what their scenes mean. Then you understand. Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc. |