BOTTOM
LINE:
For
a film marketed as a romance, “The Time Traveller’s
Wife” works well as a sci-fi piece, which will disappoint
its target market, and despite not quite handling the time travel
aspect well enough, the film offers a unique take on a relationship
between two people.
THE
GOOD: I
was pleasantly surprised by “The Time Traveller’s Wife”
for the simple reason that the film was not what I thought it would
be, particularly after the romance angle was played up so much in
the previews. The always good Eric Bana plays Henry, a man with
an unusual genetic disorder that causes him to time travel against
his will. Along his disjointed journey he develops a relationship
with Clare (Rachel McAdams), which plays out in a rather fascinating
way as together they do not have a starting point or a seemingly
ending point to the relationship. When Henry meets Clare for the
first time, Clare has already known him her entire life. When Clare
meets Henry for the first time, he is in his forties and knows her
intimately, despite the fact that she is a child. Somehow, this
disjointed and non-linear relationship develops in to an intriguing
sci-fi conceit which allows the characters to know each other’s
futures and lead a very unusual life. This becomes important when
Henry and Clare see a future version of Henry shot dead in front
of them, or when Henry sees his 10-year old daughter after the couple’s
trials in bringing a baby full term. Perhaps the best idea present
in the film is the timelessness of Henry and Clare’s relationship;
even after Henry dies, past versions of himself travel to a point
beyond his death, allowing Clare to see him again, albeit briefly.
“The Time Traveller’s Wife” is engaging in its
ideas, and offers something different than the normal relationship
film.
THE
BAD: Those
expecting a romance film will be disappointed, and they have a right
to be considering the film was marketed as a romance. There is a romantic
relationship in the film, however, it is not really the driving force
behind the movie; Henry is the central point of the film, and it is
through his time travelling and interactions at different points in
his history that provide the catalysts for everything that happens
in the film and the ideas that are presented. Not much time is spent
developing the meaning of their relationship, and in fact, some of
it seems very arbitrary, particularly when Henry, from his perspective,
meets Clare for the first time and just jumps in to the relationship
simply on her word. The relationship between Henry and his mother
is not properly explored, and is arbitrarily ended in one scene where
Henry meets her when she is still alive in the past, and he tells
her how much her son loves her. The film seems more biased towards
its sci-fi conceit, which is fine for me, but probably not for others.
The time travelling aspect itself is not handled one hundred percent
clearly either. The film does not stop to explain which Henry we are
looking at or what time period he has come from, which makes his journey
hard to follow if you were to stop and try to see it through logically.
We have to accept what we are seeing at face value and go by Henry’s
reactions, which thanks to Eric Bana, are not hard to follow.
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