Meryl Streep, in The Iron Lady
approximately 69 minutes and 11 seconds
69.8% of the film
An elderly Margaret Thatcher talks to the imagined presence of her recently deceased husband as she struggles to come to terms with his death while scenes from her past life, from girlhood to British prime minister, intervene.
You can read my short review of the film just by clicking HERE.
The screenplay spends too much time at the surface of things and never
digs deep enough to make the film really meaningful. It is constructed as a one
woman show and they got lucky they had Meryl as their leading actress.
Meryl Streep as Margaret Thatcher
To those who say Meryl is overrated from an Oscar
perspective, I give them the facts: before this win she had won only once every
8 nominations, never in the past 29 years and her 2 previous wins are most
uncontested: no one argues with her supporting Oscar for Kramer vs. Kramer and only a couple of die-hard Jessica Lange fans
could claim differently when it comes to her probably career-best performance
in Sophie’s Choice. I wanted Meryl to
win for The Iron Lady because I felt
she deserved it and because I knew/hoped it was time for a 3rd.
Meryl plays Margaret Thatcher, the first female Prime
Minister in Britain ’s
history, a strong, determined woman and overall a controversial political
figure. As she is portrayed in this film, we discover Thatcher at very old age,
struggling with dementia and remembering events of the past, the crucial points
of her career; all these, I would say, from a subjective perspective. Some have
said the entire purpose of the film was to win Meryl an Oscar, and I respond:
what’s wrong with that? It’s clearly written as a one-woman-show, with tears,
aging makeup, strong speeches, and what is wrong in seeing an Oscar-type
performance done right. We can all agree the film kinda sucks, but at one point
you stop caring about the film and focus on the performance, which is quite
close to as good as it gets.
It didn’t take much for Meryl to convince me I am about to
see a fantastic performance: it’s all there, from the first scene with
80-something Thatcher going out to buy milk. The scenes from the film with
Thatcher in present times make for the best aging
acting I’ve seen since Marion Cotillard in La vie en rose. The makeup is great and it helps a lot, but the
old-lady gestures and movements, the entire body language and emotion on the
face feel so authentic, I can’t believe anyone would argue with that.
It’s all to Meryl’s credit of course, as she puts so much
work into it to make it look natural and effortless. Every one of her scenes
from present times, every minute of her performance looks Oscar-worthy to me; I
found it impossible to figure out her best moment: it’s either her dialogues
with her daughter, the phone call from her son, the goodbye to her husband, the
scene in the doctor’s office – all are played with such an intimidating
determination, but also keeping an undisputed emotional connection – something
that is valid throughout the performance: I was always aware that under the
surface of this tough politician there’s woman, a human I can relate to, either
from being laughed at, second guessing certain actions, regretting words she
said, feeling frustrated with those around her treating her like a child.
The entire human aspect of the performance is all Meryl,
because she has the great talent of building such an emotional connection with
the audience. Is there any point in underlining how flawless the performance is
from a technical point of view? Every
gesture, every look at the camera, the voice, the old age body movement – they
all seemed perfect, because Meryl knows how to act in front of the camera and
the camera loves her. In any scene, I just couldn’t take my eyes off her.
To me, the performance was at its strongest in the present day scenes,
but she was great in every other scene too. However, as the age of the
character progressed, the performance became more and more interesting to me. I
would rank it as a 4 for the scenes before & during Prime Minister years
and an obvious 5 for the old-age
performance. Unlike many of you, I strongly feel she should’ve won 3 years ago
for Doubt, but to me this also ranks
among her best work, so I am happy with the win.
8 comments:
Wow, I really hope she wins. And I think she will.
I love her, she's brilliant. I used to have some small issues but now I worked it out. :) I'm excited about the ranking.
I'm surprised she didn't have more screentime. I felt she had like 90%. :D
BTW, I forgot but I also think she should have won for Doubt. Kate should have won for Eternal Sunshine...
"To those who say Meryl is overrated from an Oscar perspective, I give them the facts: before this win she had won only once every 8 nominations"
You act like nominations are not honor, only wins. Very few actresses were nominated for rotten films, and if name of leading lady wasn't Meryl Streep, she wouldn't have been nominated.
Why Meryl deserves to win 3rd Oscar when Glenn Close doesn't have one? Or Michelle Williams?
@dinasztie,
well, there are plenty of scenes with younger Thatcher, and also real-life footage, so that would explain the screentime. :)
She's the only nominee I have seen from that year yet. I don't want to talk about her performance yet but I think the movie is absolutely dreadful.
The Meryl hate is BORING. ZZZzzz...
That Great Glenn question makes sense. However, I was almost relieved that Great Glenn lost because imagine all the shit she would have got (there's a tedious Great Glenn hater as well who IMO is not alone). Meryl simply gave the best performance this year and deserved to win. This Great Glenn nod was fantastic as (apart from being well-deserved) it will hopefully bring her more baity parts and an Oscar, eventually. I hope/imagine she will win in full glory just like Geraldine Page.
Interesting that every nominee this year has avid haters except for maybe Michelle.
well i hated michelle as marilyn,totally wrong,a flawed interpretation except maybe the acting scenes!!!
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