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NOVEL'S POWER CAPTURED IN `THE ENGLISH PATIENT'.


Byline: Amy Dawes Daily News Film Critic

It's hard to imagine how the searing sear 1  
v. seared, sear·ing, sears

v.tr.
1. To char, scorch, or burn the surface of with or as if with a hot instrument. See Synonyms at burn1.

2.
 lyric prose of the Canadian novelist Michael Ondaatje Noun 1. Michael Ondaatje - Canadian writer (born in Sri Lanka in 1943)
Ondaatje, Philip Michael Ondaatje
 could be captured onscreen on·screen or on-screen  
adj. & adv.
1. As shown on a movie, television, or display screen.

2. Within public view; in public.
, but in ``The English Patient,'' writer-director Anthony Minghella has come up with something that has very close to the same effect.

Adapting Ondaatje's almost unbearably romantic novel of the wartime passion between a mapmaker map·mak·er  
n.
A person who makes maps; a cartographer.



mapmak·ing n.
 on expedition in the Sahara Desert (Ralph Fiennes Ralph Nathaniel Fiennes, (IPA: [ˈreɪf ˈfaɪnz], born 22 December 1962) is a Tony Award-winning, Academy Award-nominated and Genie Award-nominated English actor. ) and the beautiful, fearless wife (Kristin Scott Thomas Kristin Scott Thomas OBE (born 24 May 1960) is an Academy Award-nominated English actress. Biography
Kristin Scott Thomas was born in Redruth, Cornwall. Her father was a pilot for the Royal Navy and died in a flying accident in 1964, and she is the older sister of the
) of a colleague, Minghella creates passages of unforgettable cinema that burst joyously to the surface of a narrative that is languid and overlong o·ver·long  
adj.
Excessively long: an overlong play.

adv.
For too long: talked overlong. 
, but ultimately haunting.

At the outset, a pilot and his golden-haired passenger are shot down over the sensual sandhills Sandhills could be:
  • Sandhills (Carolina), in the Carolinas in the United States
  • Sand Hills (Nebraska), United States
  • The Sand Hills (Ontario), near Houghton Centre, Ontario, on Lake Erie
  • Sandhills, Bournemouth
  • Sandhills, Dorset
  • Sandhills, Kent
 of the Sahara, circa 1942. The survivor, his face burned away like his memory, convalesces in the care of a sensitive army nurse (Juliette Binoche), shell-shocked by the war, who determines that this mysterious ``English patient'' will live out his last days with dignity.

The nurse, Hana, breaks off from her regiment to retreat with the patient to a ruined Italian monastery that they pass along the way, and as she reads to him from a history book he carries with him, his own history, or a story that he's not sure is his own, comes flooding back to him in screen flashbacks.

Before long, these two refugees are also visited by a rogue soldier, Carravaggio (Willem Dafoe) who is searching for a man to whom he is tragically linked, and a brave but tender turban-wearing Sikh bomb expert, Kip (Naveen Andrews) with whom the nurse falls in love.

Minghella, a British playwright and filmmaker (``Truly, Madly, Deeply'') clearly besotted be·sot  
tr.v. be·sot·ted, be·sot·ting, be·sots
To muddle or stupefy, as with alcoholic liquor or infatuation.



[be- + sot, to stupefy (from sot, fool
 with Ondaatje's material, ambitiously gives us more of the novel, in a movie two hours and 39 minutes long, than we really need (along with far more close-ups of the skinless burn victim than we require), and the effect can be exasperating.

But in among it all there are images of such artistry, exotic contrast and extraordinary beauty - the kind of life experiences that one can imagine occurring only amid the absurdity and ruin of war - that one can only be thrilled and grateful that the filmmaker has pulled it off.

Stars Ralph Fiennes (``Quiz Show,'' ``Schindler's List'') and Kristin Scott Thomas (``Angels and Insects'') are both exceptional at bringing complex inner lives to the screen, and the camera lingers long on their tawny good looks against the golden light of sun-baked Egyptian landscapes.

This is not the kind of movie experience from which you can demand a quick spoon-feeding or a tidy structure, though the skeleton that does emerge is surprisingly sturdy, given the challenge of Ondaatje's interior writing style.

It is a movie into which you escape, a movie that swallows you up in the ache of war and winds, loss and destiny.

``We are the real countries, not the borders drawn on maps,'' writes Katharine (Scott Thomas) to her lover.

Aided by the exceptional work of cinematographer John Seale, Minghella, in his third film, gives the material a visual treatment that is as distinct, evocative and shaping as a novelist's voice.

It's a vision of life during wartime that stains the mind, not only with blood and loss, but with poetry.

THE FACTS

The film: ``The English Patient'' (R; sexual situations).

The stars: Ralph Fiennes, Kristin Scott Thomas, Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe.

Behind the scenes: Directed by Anthony Minghella. Screenplay by Anthony Minghella, based on the novel by Michael Ondaatje.

Running time: Two hours, 39 minutes.

Playing: AMC (Advanced Mezzanine Card) See AdvancedTCA.  Century 14, Century City; Avco Cinema, Westwood; GCC GCC: see Gulf Cooperation Council.

(compiler, programming) GCC - The GNU Compiler Collection, which currently contains front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, and Ada, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj, etc).
 Beverly Connection, West L.A.; Cineplex Odeon, Santa Monica.

Our rating: Four Stars.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Colin Firth and Kristin Scott Thomas in director Anthony Minghella's ``The English Patient,'' based on Michael Ondaatje's novel.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:L.A. LIFE
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Movie Review
Date:Nov 15, 1996
Words:632
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