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Nicole
Kidman's career has been full of hits and misses – something
that became painfully clear in 2001 when the actress starred in
both the truly awful (Moulin Rouge)
and the elegantly sublime (The Others).
Her latest - the middling Birthday Girl – lands
somewhere between the two, tilting ever so slightly toward the
positive.
Though
she's the biggest name in Girl, Kidman isn't really the
star. Those honors
go to Lost Souls' Ben Chaplin, who plays John Buckingham,
a single Londoner with a boring bank job and no social life of
which to speak. As
ordinary and unassuming as you can get, John does something
astonishing for such a vanilla character:
He orders a Russian mail-order bride via the internet.
When he heads to the airport to fetch his wife-to-be,
he's shocked to find Nadia (Kidman), but not as much for her
vampy-slut good looks as her inability to speak English and
penchant for cigarettes.
A
stickler for efficiency and perfection, John takes Nadia home
and spends most of his waking moments during the next few days
unsuccessfully trying to call the mail-order company to swap his
betrothed for the English-speaking, non-smoking model he
ordered. No such
luck. Instead, John
is forced to communicate with Nadia in ways we've probably all
seen in movies and television a bunch of times before.
Somebody
famous – I think it was Arnold Palmer – once said love is
the international language, and that's just what John discovers
when Nadia unearths his stash of porn videos while he's off at
work. With new,
non-verbal ways to please her man swimming around her Russian
brain, Nadia surprises John when he gets home, which is right
around the time he stops caring about the language barrier and
the smoking.
The
two grow closer and closer, but the relationship hits a bit of a
snag on Nadia's birthday when two of her Russian cousins (Amélie's
Mathieu Kassovitz and The Messenger's
Vincent Cassel) show up and turn John's life upside-down.
There are surprises and more surprises, but nothing a
sleuth of Encyclopedia Brown caliber couldn't figure out without
too much problem. The script, co-written by director Jez
Butterworth and brother Tom, doesn't strive to be anything more
than fun escapism, and that's just what it is.
There
are enough quirks in Girl to make it interesting - some
sound and others silly. For
starters, we're watching an Aussie and two French guys playing
Russians, but they're actually speaking Russian instead of
merely sporting an accent that comes across as a fusion of Count
von Count and Boris Badenov (though, for some reason, they still
sound like that). It's
also fun to watch Kassovitz and Cassel act together, considering
the former occasionally directs the latter (including last
year's The Crimson Rivers and the César-winning Hate).
Leading the charge behind the camera are potential future
Oscar nominees for Best Score (Angelo Badalamenti, Mulholland
Drive) and Best Cinematography (Oliver Stapleton, The
Shipping News).
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for
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