Mike Nichols, Miranda Richardson, David de Keyser. (R,
96 min.)
The Designated Mourner is one man's elegiac yet disdainful recollection of a group
of people and a way of life that have vanished under the thumb of an unnamed oppressive
regime. As the so-called "Designated Mourner," film director and stage actor Mike
Nichols (The Graduate, Silkwood, and The Birdcage) is spectacular in his first-ever
acting performance onscreen. The movie is the film version of a play written by the
multi-talented Wallace Shawn (My Dinner With André, Radio Days, Toy Story, Clueless)
and mounted with great success last year in London with this same group of principals.
Acclaimed actress Miranda Richardson (The Crying Game, Damage) and British theatre
veteran David de Keyser join Nichols onscreen for this three-person drama; the renowned
playwright and director David Hare (theatre: Plenty, A Map of the World; film: Wetherby,
Strapless, and Damage) directs. It sounds so good in theory, but watching The Designated
Mourner turns out to be a trying experience. It's no walk in the park, it's no Dinner
With André. Told entirely in direct address, the three characters sit behind
a table and speak to the camera and rarely interact. Jack (Nichols) is the central
narrator who shares his memories of the years he spent in the company of this unnamed
country's intellectual elite. He married the brilliant, no-frills Judy (Richardson),
whose father Howard (de Keyser) is a revered poet and enemy of the repressive government.
As the years pass, Jack grows increasingly aware of the degree to which he resents
this pure and high-brow circle and he abandons them to pursue more "low-brow" interests.
Meanwhile, the government steps up its repression of political dissidents, throwing
them in jail and systematically destroying whatever cultural influence they ever
possessed. Jack somehow survives, and thus becomes the designated mourner, and is
now in the ironic position of being the only one left to remember their legacy. The
three performers are so engaging and the writing delivers such regular sparks of
poetic brilliance that these things, in themselves, keep the film from plunging into
a fatal abyss. Yet, apart from the close-ups, there's nothing about The Designated
Mourner that couldn't be done just as well (and probably more efficiently) with a
taped audio book. The movie provides a permanent record of the play, and, hopefully,
will lead to more acting work for Mike Nichols. But, otherwise, The Designated Mourner
is wrapped in shroud.
1.5 stars
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Capsule Reviews
The Designated Mourner 
The Designated Mourner 
The Designated Mourner 
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