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Ralph Fiennes
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YFF Special Events


 


An Evening with Ralph Fiennes
Monday, December 12, 6:00 pm
The Constant Gardener followed by a Conversation with Ralph Fiennes followed by The End of the Affair
Tickets include entire program (two films and conversation): $20 Film Society members, $25 general public


Since he burst onto the movie scene in the early 90s, Ralph (that’s pronounced “Rafe”) Fiennes has raised the bar in movie acting. Few actors are better at conveying the physical impact of emotional upset. Waves of feeling seem to pass through Fiennes’s characters in Schindler’s List, Quiz Show, The English Patient, The End of the Affair and in the upcoming The White Countess (directed by James Ivory from a script by Kazuo Ishiguro). His performances are animated in the most surprising and moving ways: with Fiennes, a smile or a turn of the head can embody a world of heartbreak. An adventurous artist who thrives on challenges, Fiennes is also blessed with one of the most musical vocal instruments in movies, and he employs it to devastating effect.

Fiennes will join us to discuss his career and his approach to acting. Before and after the discussion, we’ll be showing two of the very finest examples of his work. In Fernando Mereilles’s brilliant adaptation of John Le Carré’s The Constant Gardener, Fiennes is Justin Quayle, a quietly recessive career diplomat who is immediately taken with Rachel Weisz’s outspoken activist Tessa. When Justin is stationed in Africa, Tessa becomes a vocal opponent of the big drug companies, who are performing drug trials on an unsuspecting and impoverished population. When Tessa is murdered, Justin devotes his life to uncovering the truth about his wife, and the savagery behind the corporate/diplomatic circles in which he travels. Fiennes’s Justin is a performance of uncommon delicacy and one of the richest creations of the year.

Following the discussion, we’ll also be showing Neil Jordan’s stunning adaptation of Graham Greene’s The End of the Affair (1999), featuring a remarkably poignant and concentrated performance from Fiennes and wonderful work from Julianne Moore and Stephen Rea. Fiennes is Maurice Bendrix, who miraculously survives a bombing attack in WWII London. An incandescent Moore is Sarah, who renounces her love for Maurice as an offering to God for saving his life, and Rea is her gentle, devoted husband. Fiennes’s performance is a piercing portrait of a soul in flux, slowly shifting from selfishness to compassion.