This
elegantly written film, Fellowes' directorial debut, is
a strikingly human drama that allows its cast to create
fascinating characters we're genuinely interested in, even
if they're not entirely likeable.
James and Anne
(Wilkinson and Watson) have a fiercely middle-class English
life, with a house in London, where James works as a corporate
solicitor, and a sprawling home in Buckinghamshire, where
they revel in the country life. But when their cleaning
lady (Bassett) loses her husband in a road accident, cracks
start appearing in their orderly world. Their posh neighbour
Bill (Everett) becomes increasingly involved in their lives,
secrets start to escape, people do things they regret and
morality just refuses to stay put.
These shifting
ethics are the story's strongest aspects, as we marvel at
how a small change in perspective can completely alter what
we see as right and wrong. Almost every character is forced
to do a complete U-turn at one time, all while struggling
with standard relationship issues. Fellowes expertly withholds
information until it organically seeps out into the open,
giving brief out-of-synch glimpses at what has happened
or what is coming, and tantalising with suggestions and
hidden truths.
And of course,
he gives his fine cast wonderful material to work with.
It's all about suppression and repression--a society in
which the appearance of civility is far more important than
the real thing. Wilkinson and Watson are simply superb,
saying as much with a glance as they do with the lacerating
dialog. Bassett is also superb, especially in a couple of
pivotal scenes. While Everett has a smaller, thankless role,
which he nails perfectly; Bill trundles through the story
with the steady arrogance of the obscenely wealthy.
As the
characters create a real mess of their lives, they pass
a point of no return that we think will be their undoing.
And yet, the story cleverly shows the resilience of British
society while quietly exposing its dangers. When telling
the truth becomes the worst possible thing to do, you know
something is seriously wrong. Civilised, yes. But also muted,
imprisoning and wrenchingly sad. In a stiff-upper-lip, everything-will-be-just-fine
way, of course.
Separate Lies Cast:
Tom Wilkinson, Emily Watson, Rupert Everett, Linda
Bassett,
Hermione Norris, David Harewood, John Neville, John
Warnaby,
Jeremy Child, Richenda Carey, Alice O'Connell, Christine
Lohr