A tantalizing and beautiful picture made with tremendous integrity, and anchored by two marvelous performances, Isabel Coixet's The Secret Life of Words still, somehow, doesn't quite work.
The Secret Life of Words (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:36
Fresh:25
Rotten:11
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: The Secret Life of Words is a slow, mannered drama, but with a revelatory and powerful ending that rewards the patient viewer.
Runtime: 1 hr 56 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: THE SECRET LIFE OF WORDS, written and directed by Isabel Coixet, follows Hanna (Sarah Polley), a factory worker who lives alone in a barren apartment, wears a hearing-aid, and keeps to herself with... THE SECRET LIFE OF WORDS, written and directed by Isabel Coixet, follows Hanna (Sarah Polley), a factory worker who lives alone in a barren apartment, wears a hearing-aid, and keeps to herself with a rigorous daily routine of identical meals, a fresh bar of soap every day, and needlepoint work at night. While on an extended holiday in Northern Ireland, she volunteers as a nurse, tending to a burn victim Josef (Tim Robbins) stationed on an oil rig. While Hanna coaxes him back to health, Josef, who has suffered temporary blindness, reaches out to her urgently, wanting to connect. As his brutish and passionate demeanor contrasts sharply with Hanna's solemn and quiet manner, Hanna initially refuses to reveal anything about herself, even her real name. But she soon she starts to recognize parallels between her own isolation and that of the others on the oil rig. She eventually grows to care for Josef and shares with him a painfully severe secret from her past that opens wounds, and doors, for the two strangers from different worlds to come together and help heal one another. With the shaky-camera technique, absence of a film score, and the backdrop of a lone oil rig, writer and director Coixet (who also wrote and directed Polley in the 2003 critically-acclaimed MY LIFE WITHOUT ME), emphasizes the vulnerability and seclusion of the characters. Robbins and Polley turn in compelling performances; and a strong supporting cast that includes Javier Camara (TALK TO HER) and Eddie Marsan (THE ILLUSIONIST). [More]
Starring: Sarah Polley, Tim Robbins, Javier Camara, Eddie Marsan
Starring: Sarah Polley, Tim Robbins, Javier Camara, Eddie Marsan, Julie Christie, Sverre Anker Ousdal, Leonor Watling
Director: Isabel Coixet
Director: Isabel Coixet
Studio: Strand Releasing
Reviews for The Secret Life of Words
In due course skeletons will march out of closets, but the movie yields up its secrets with slow reluctance.
What pleasure there is to be wrung from the exceptionally banal The Secret Life of Words lies in the harsh, unforgiving beauty (lyrically shot by Jean-Claude Larrieu) and wonderfully strange social life of the isolated rig.
This thing is very, very deep. So deep in fact that getting the bends is a distinct possibility.
The claustrophobic and artificial atmosphere of the setting is unfortunately matched by the equally artificial drama.
A frustrating film full of many wonderful parts that the filmmaker ultimately betrays.
Meditative, slow-paced examination of how post-traumatic stress syndrome affects two troubled people who connect on a windswept oil rig in the Irish Sea.
Can't resist the meaningful political backstory that will transform her characters into symbols--that is, into ventriloquist dummies rattling off humdrum rhetoric.
Making it work onscreen requires a Herculean effort from the actors, a task to which Polley and Robbins -- as well as their supporting cast -- are more than adequately suited.
Heartache is guaranteed. And so it is in The Secret Life of Words, a strangely beautiful film about an ugly memory that Hanna (Sarah Polley) carries for the rest of her life
Though I continue to have strong reservations about the stylistic abstractions in Ms. Coixet’s narrative, the performances given by Ms. Polley, Mr. Robbins and Ms. Christie take me a long way in accepting and recommending the whole package.
"The Secret Life Of Words" manages to mesmerize and engage, if not fully involve.
The true force of The Secret Life of Words, as would be appropriate, is encapsulated almost completely in its strong dialogues.
A serious, heartfelt piece from a filmmaker concerned with human rights issues.
Director Isabel Croixet creates an intriguing, enclosed world aboard the ship
Coixet is an adult-contemporary visualist whose films are almost always saved by the great performances she coaxes out of her actors.
Given the physical limitations of their characters, Polley and Robbins give remarkably compelling performances, and though the resolution of their slowly evolving relationship is a bit too pat, it is one you won't soon forget.
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