While not a career zenith
for any of its major participants, except perhaps leading lady Lesley-Anne
Down, Hanover Street is a respectable
World War II romance filled with old-fashioned themes of heroism and sacrifice.
The movie’s reliance on narrative coincidence is a problem, and one wishes
writer-director Peter Hyams had moved past archetypes to investigate his
characters more deeply, but Hanover
Street delivers much of what it promises—the stars are attractive, their
onscreen love affair is complicated by unusual circumstances, and the movie
spins inexorably toward an action-packed climax. So, even though it’s all a bit
rudimentary in conception, the full package—accentuated by David Watkin’s
shadowy cinematography and John Barry’s plaintive musical score—goes down
smoothly.
Harrison Ford, giving the most satisfying performance of his wilderness years
between Star Wars (1977) and The Empire Strikes Back (1980), stars as
David Halloran, a U.S. pilot stationed near London circa 1943. After a quick
meet-cute with British nurse Margaret Sellinger (Down), David
persuades his new acquaintance to join him for a long afternoon of tea and
conversation. Although they fall in love almost instantly, Margaret reveals
she’s married—but then the trauma of being caught in an air raid pushes them
together. They begin an affair. This affects both of their lives badly, because
David loses his combat edge while worrying about when he’s going to see
Margaret again, and Margaret introduces a chill into her marriage to Paul
Sellinger (Christopher Plummer). Paul was a teacher during peacetime, but he’s
now an officer with British Intelligence—and when he feels Margaret drifting
away, he recklessly volunteers for a mission behind enemy lines, hoping to win
back her respect.
The coincidence with which Hyams merges the fates of these
characters stretches believability, but Hyams commits wholeheartedly to the
ensuing melodrama, and the second half of the movie—when the story shifts from
romance to thrills—is brisk and tense. As far as the actors go, Ford sulks a
bit too much, though he’s sufficiently dashing during action scenes to
compensate for his moodiness; and if Down fails to provide much substance
behind her mesmerizing beauty, that’s acceptable as well, since she’s primarily
meant to be an object of desire. Plummer is, predictably, the picture’s saving
grace, lending elegance, humor, and vulnerability to his characterization. FYI,
Hanover Street is far more palatable
than the similarly themed Yanks,
which was released later the same year—although the latter picture, directed by John
Schlesinger, is more sophisticated, it’s a lifeless museum piece compared to
Hyams’ fast-moving crowd-pleaser.
Hanover Street: GROOVY
2 comments:
I love this movie! Granted it is not a great movie, but it is entertaining, well made, well acted and pretty good!
I think it is underrated! The three leads give excellent performances and the art direction and set decoration is top notch.
Was on site when they filmed some of this. Ford and Plummer took time to talk to fans between shots. Both class acts. Film is way better than critics made it out to be.
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