“I can’t lose myself in
somebody else’s life when I haven’t lived my own yet,” remarks spirited Aussie
lass Sybylla Melvyn in My Brilliant
Career, a sensitive exploration of feminist themes set in Australia circa
the late 1800s. When we first meet her, Sybylla (Judy Davis) lives on a farm
with her working-class parents, but she improbably envisions a “brilliant
career” as a writer. Sybylla believes her situation has improved when her
parents, unable to support her any longer, send her to live with a wealthy
relative, Grandma Bossier (Aileen Britton), but Grandma is an imperious snob
with little tolerance for Sybylla’s artistic aspirations. The two clash
regularly because Grandma wants Sybylla to become a proper young lady, whereas
Sybylla insists on speaking her mind, no matter whom she offends.
Meanwhile,
Sybylla meets Harry Beecham (Sam Neill), a member of the upper class, and the
two embark on a sort of romance—Harry expresses his admiration for Sybylla’s
iconoclastic nature, but Sybylla articulates myriad reasons why she’s not ready
to marry. One of her hang-ups is a belief that she’s ugly, which causes her to
doubt the sincerity of Harry’s affections, and another is her narcissistic
assumption that she’s too “clever” (her word) for the rest of the world to
understand. Throughout My Brilliant
Career, Sybylla makes reckless choices that feed her thirst for experience
but complicate every other aspect of her life. For instance, after Sybylla
lingers outside during a rainstorm and catches a cold, she gets a scolding from
her grandmother: “Now you see the consequences of wild and extravagant
behavior.” And yet wild and extravagant behavior is all the heroine craves,
even if that means sacrificing traditional notions of happiness, i.e. marriage.
Adapted from a popular 1901 novel by Miles Franklin and directed by Aussie
filmmaker Gillian Armstrong (this was her first feature-length fictional
project), My Brilliant Career is
consistently insightful, restrained, and tasteful, so Sybylla’s stridency never
carries over into the tone of the movie itself; rather, Armstrong observes the
protagonist with admiring detachment. To its credit, the movie avoids reducing
supporting characters to stereotypes, which would have put Sybylla on a
pedestal, and as a result, Sybylla emerges as the most interesting kind of
feminist icon—a complicated woman who sometimes works at cross-purposes with
herself as she struggles to blaze a new path.
Davis, in her first major film
role, presents her character’s fierceness without playing for sympathy, and
Neill, who already had several films to his credit by the time he made My Brilliant Career, comfortably essays
the role of a forward-thinking man unwilling to make demands of a woman. Like
so many costume dramas about subtle shifts in social structures, My Brilliant Career will be too dry and
slow for many viewers, with lots of scenes of people in evening dress speaking
politely to each other. Yet in terms of thematic content and the movie’s place
in the history of female-directed cinema, My
Brilliant Career is a work of minor but indisputable importance.
My Brilliant Career: GROOVY
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