Darling - Movie Review

  • 01 November 2005

Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Julie Christie stars in a role written for her: the brazen bird Diana Scott, a swinging Londoner who is discovered by a reporter for a street interview, then rises through the European modeling/acting world by sleeping with every man she meets. Laurence Harvey (from The Manchurian Candidate) and Dirk Bogarde are two of the men who use her and vice versa.

Darling exposes the jet-set high society of the mid-'60s with the cynicism and detail of a muckraking documentary. Antonioni and Fellini explored the same milieu, but writer Frederic Raphael is a much sharper and subtler satirist than either. (Raphael is also responsible for Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut, and Darling's influence on that film is easy to spot). Raphael's script effectively surveys a gallery of posers -- vapid trendsetters, journalists and fashionistas, pretentious artists, and even minor royalty (Diana marries an Italian prince). Though the film drags in a few places, John Schlesinger's direction is generally excellent.

The cast is very good, but Christie steals the show -- she won the Best Actress Oscar in 1965 for this film (not Doctor Zhivago, a better film but a less memorable performance). Her character is almost a metaphor for the generation and decade itself -- innocent and guileless, but destructive.

Inevitably, Darling now seems dated; its 1960s roots have grown out -- way out. But it's still an intriguing period piece from the '60s -- the last era with so much style that even these decadent and frivolous characters seem charming.

Don't pout.

Image caption Darling

Facts and Figures

Year: 1965

Run time: 128 mins

In Theaters: Tuesday 3rd August 1965

Distributed by: Lionsgate

Production compaines: Spader Knekt

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 4.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 67%
Fresh: 6 Rotten: 3

IMDB: 7.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: John Schlesinger

Producer: Joseph Janni

Screenwriter: Frederic Raphael

Starring: Michelle Meadows as Eva, Michael Segerström as Bernard, Richard Ulfsäter as Micke, Lis Nilheim as Miles' mother, Erik Johansson as Salesman #2, Elisabeth von Gerber as Margaretha

Also starring: Dirk Bogarde, Laurence Harvey, Julie Christie, Roland Curram, Basil Henson, Helen Lindsay, Carlo Palmucci, Dante Posani, Umberto Raho, Joseph Janni, Frederic Raphael