The Lady

"Very Good"

The Lady Review


The inspirational story of Aung San Suu Kyi comes to the big screen in the unlikely hands of Luc Besson, better known for mindless action like Taken and The Transporter. This is an emotionally involving film, with terrific central performances.

As daughter of Aung San, founder of independent Burma, Suu (Yeoh) has a place in her nation's heart. She lives in Britain with her Oxford-professor husband Michael (Thewlis) and their sons (Raggett and Woodhouse), and when she returns home to care for her ailing mother, she gets involved in the pro-democracy movement. This terrifies the military junta that rules with an iron fist, so they put her under house arrest just before the 1990 election that her party won in a landslide. Then the military refuses to cede power.

The film traces Suu Kyi's house arrest over the next 21 years, during which she was prevented from seeing her sons and her husband, even as he was dying of cancer in the late-1990s. During this time she won the Nobel Peace Prize (1991) and numerous other international citations, all while Burma's dictators violently suppressed peaceful protests and ignored global pressure. We've seen these shocking events in news headlines and in noted documentaries (see 2008's Burma VJ), so this film centres on Suu Kyi's emotional journey.

And this is what makes the film so engaging, as Yeoh and Thewlis bring a terrific blend of intelligence, humour and steely passion. Sure, both come across as rather saintly, despite half-hearted denials, but they emerge as raw, real people battling against the odds while sacrificing their personal happiness for something much bigger. In many ways Thewlis has the more accessible role as a man who struggles with what happens even as he understands his wife's commitment.

Besson holds the somewhat simplified plot together with sure-handed direction and a beautiful sense of the settings, both in Oxford and Rangoon (shot in Thailand). The contrast between these cities couldn't be more striking, and this highlights the warmth and intelligence of the Burmese people in the face of their government's bald-faced cruelty. But even though the political cause is worthy and inspiring, it's in the personal story that the film wins us over.



The Lady

Facts and Figures

Run time: 132 mins

In Theaters: Wednesday 30th November 2011

Distributed by: Cohen Media Group

Production compaines: Mars Distribution, Siam Movies, Left Bank Pictures, France2 Cinéma, EuropaCorp., Canal+, France Télévision, Coficup, Backup Films

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 33%
Fresh: 22 Rotten: 44

IMDB: 7.1 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director:

Producer: , Andy Harries, Virginie Silla, Jean Todt

Starring: as Aung San Suu Kyi, as Michael Aris, Jonathan Raggett as Kim Aris, Jonathan Woodhouse as Alexander Aris, as Karma Phuntsho, Susan Wooldridge as Lucinda Philips, Flint Bangkok as Nyo Ohn Myint, Guy Barwell as Military Policeman, Sahajak Boonthanakit as Leo Nichols, Antony Hickling as BBC journalist (voice)

Also starring:

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