LONDON (Hollywood
Reporter) – Jon Amiel's "Creation" is bound to spark controversy
because it depicts Charles Darwin struggling with his epochal
1859 work, "On the Origin of Species," though it's
much more than a red flag to religious fundamentalists.
The
opening-night film at the Toronto International Film Festival is an
intelligent, touching depiction of a brilliant man who's sure of his scientific
skills but tormented not only by remorse over the loss of a beloved child but
also by the realization that he has lost his faith.
It
is shot beautifully and boasts performances by Paul Bettany as Darwin
and his real-life wife, Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly, as Darwin's wife, Emma, that should attract
awards attention. Thoughtful and memorable, it will do well with grown-up
audiences across the board.
Working
from the book "Annie's Box," by Darwin's
great-great-grandson Randal Keynes, screenwriter John Collee shows the
scientist as a fully engaged husband and father who buckles under the weight of
his daughter Annie's death, for which he blames himself.
Collee
and director Amiel move seamlessly back and forth from the lovely times when
Annie (Martha West) was the apple of her father's eye to the present as he is
wracked with writer's block and the fear that by writing his book, he will lose
the love of his deeply religious wife.
Thanks
to the writing, pacing and Bettany's nuanced performance, it is one of the best
delineations of intellectual and emotional struggle seen on film in many a
year. The actor's scenes with Annie and Emma have an extraordinary tenderness
that grips the heart just as Darwin's
scientific dilemma engages the brain. West is unaffected and winning as the
girl, and Connelly, with a perfect English accent, shows the wife's anguish as
well as her undying loyalty.
Amiel's
greatest achievement is that "Creation" is a deeply human film with
moments of genuine lightness and high spirits to go with all the deep thinking.
Louise
Stjernsward's costumes and Laurence Dorman's production design, plus the
English countryside, make it all very handsome, and cinematographer Jess Hall
and editor Melanie Oliver deserve top marks. Christopher Young's score is apt
and extremely pleasing.
It
would be a great shame if those with religious convictions spurned the film out
of hand, as they will find it even-handed and wise.