This starring role is something of a change of pace for Minnie Driver, the British
actress who of late has become best known for always playing the "best-guy's gal"
in such American movies as Sleepers, Grosse Pointe Blank, and Good Will Hunting.
Here she returns to Britain to play the title role of "the governess" in writer-director
Sandra Goldbacher's first feature film. The film is an atmospheric work, a period
piece set in the 1840s during the dawn of the Age of Photography with a dense and
moody visual style that befits its Brönte-esque subject matter. Driver plays
an independent-minded young woman named Rosina, who is the eldest daughter in a family
of Sephardic Jews in London. The film's opening scenes of the cloistered, almost
subterranean lifestyle of the city's sizable Jewish population are fascinating to
observe. Living within the heart of one of the world's greatest cities, the Jewish
community walks a fine line between urban assimilation and a sequestered but vibrant
religious and cultural identity. Rosina's family is plunged into sudden financial
debt when her father is murdered and his estate is discovered to have been eaten
away by a secret gambling habit. The situation prompts Rosina to seek employment
in order to support her family. Securing a job as a governess for the Cavendish family,
who live on a remote Scottish island, Rosina uses the best of her play-acting skills
to don a new identity as Mary Blackchurch (of swarthy Italian descent). It is a world
completely alien to her -- from the rough-hewn landscape to the icy reserve of the
Cavendish household. Her young charge Clementina (Hoath) is a little brat, the lady
of the house (Walter) is a frustrated spouse, the older son (Rhys Meyers) is a disgraced
university student who becomes immediately smitten with Mary, and patriarch Charles
Cavendish (Wilkinson) is a man exclusively absorbed in his scientific studies in
which he seeks to discover a chemical fixative that will commit photographic images
to paper. Mary becomes intrigued by his experiments and the man himself and in time
she not only becomes the one to accidentally discover the salt-water fixative process
that furthers his work but also engages in an illicit sexual liaison with her employer.
In many ways, The Governess is standard-issue bodice-ripper, although to its credit
the resolution of the story's central untenable situation is uncommon and its intriguing
coda sets up Rosina/Mary as a proto-feminist heroine who has reclaimed her Jewish
identity. The themes established in The Governess resound throughout: the conscious
assumption of identities, the gap between "fixed" images and reality, and the search
for a fixative that will secure the elusive qualities of art and love. At times,
The Governess slips into too modern a tone and language to be completely believable,
and Driver's facial expression conveys more inscrutability than emotional range,
making sequences dally along with little gained knowledge or narrative advancement.
Yet, the film remains in the mind like a snapshot, immutably fixed and evocative.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
The Governess 
Full Length Reviews
The Governess 
The Governess 
The Governess 
Capsule Reviews
The Governess 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
The Only Thrill 
First Love, Last Rites 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Sandra Goldbacher at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|