Alicia Vikander Michael
Fassbender
Rachel Weisz
Beautifully
filmed in Australia and New Zealand, with rich musical accompaniment, artfully
framed cinematography, and superior actors, The
Light between Oceans promised to be an outstanding film. Unfortunately, it falls short in its
story line, such that I began to think of it as “Light (truth) between oceans
of bad decisions.” It was good in
its premise of presenting a Solomon’s dilemma about mothers and a baby. The problem here is that half of the
dilemma was the result of a poor decision when truth should have been the
primary consideration. Yes, people
do make bad decisions based on emotional concerns, but once insight comes to
bear, and errors are compounded by guilt, we can expect all hell to break
loose.
Tom
(Fassbender) has fought in the Western Front of WWI for four years, and when he
returns home to Australia, he decides he would like the isolation he would be
afforded if he becomes the keeper of the Janus Rock Lighthouse. He meets with the locals and is quickly
offered the job (the previous caretaker left under troubled circumstances,
which the townspeople attribute to the long periods of isolation his job
entailed.) Tom, who is unassuming
and seeming to carry a load of survivor’s guilt, is untroubled by this, and
looks forward to it.
Much
to his surprise, a local beauty named Isabel (Vikander) has an immediate crush
on him, and after an afternoon picnic asks to see the lighthouse. But, he says, the only other person
allowed there is the wife of the caretaker. Well, then, “Marry me”, she says. After brief correspondences, they do decide to wed, and
spend blissful months in an idyllic setting, until tragedy strikes in the form
of miscarriages.
They
seem to be coping reasonably well with their grief when a surprise washes
ashore. It’s a boat with a baby
inside—and a dead body. Tom is
prepared to go with protocol, report the death and apply to adopt the child,
but Isabel sees this as a gift from God and pleads so earnestly, Tom doesn’t
have the heart to deny her, and thus begins a heartbreaking series of fateful
decisions, the consequences of which begin when, after two years of being away,
they go to town and discover a hard truth.
It’s
likely that most people who see The Light
between Oceans will thoroughly enjoy it. Fassbender, Vikander, and Weisz are gifted actors who
mesmerize when they’re on screen, and the cinematography by Adam Arkapaw is
worth going to see just for his artistic renditions. The same for Alexandre Desplat’s music; he never seems to
fall short. The movie is based on
the highly successful novel by M. L. Stedman.
A Soloman-like dilemma with an unnecessarily
dissatisfying resolution.
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