Sally Potter’s playful and sumptuous Orlando is her inspired take on Virginia Woolf’s novel, starring Tilda Swinton as the Elizabethan nobleman who lives for centuries, first as a man, and latterly as a woman.
Staff Pick: Ingrid
There are lots of intellectual traditions vying for ascendancy in Potter’s adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s 1928 modernist novel, but the joy is that the film comes over simply: a beautiful historical pageant of 400 years of English history, full of visual and aural pleasures, sly jokes, thought-provoking insights, emotional truths — and romance. It begins at the opulent court of Virgin Queen Elizabeth (Crisp), where the male immortal Orlando receives favour and an estate; and thence follows his quest for love in 50-year jumps through the Civil War, the early colonial period, the effete literary salons of 1750 (by which time Orlando is a woman), the Victorian era of property, and finally a 20th century postscript added by Potter. The fine, stylized performances from an idiosyncratic international cast are admirably headed by Swinton’s magnificent Orlando, who acts as the film’s complicitous eyes and ears; and there’s little to fault in Alexei Rodionov’s cinematography, which renders the scenes with rare sensitivity. It’s a critical work – in the sense that it comments wryly on such things as representations of English history, sexuality/androgyny and class – but made in the spirit of a love poem to both Woolf and the England that made us.
Wally Hammond, Time Out
This is the kind of movie you want to talk about afterward.
Roger Ebert
A dreamy, swoony reverie of shape-shifting sexual identity. A film by aesthetes, for aesthetes.
Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian
Sally Potter
Tilda Swinton, Billy Zane, Lothaire Bluteau, John Wood, Quentin Crisp, Jimmy Somerville, Heathcote Williams
UK
1992
English
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Credits
Producer
Christopher Sheppard
Screenwriter
Sally Potter
Cinematography
Andrew Speller, Aleksei Rodionov
Editor
Hervé Schneid
Original Music
Sally Potter, David Motion
Production Design
Ben Van Os, Jan Roelfs
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