Clearly imagined as a tribute to a colorful sort
of woman whose zest for life is eclipsed only by her steadfast belief in her
son, Promise at Dawn instead plays
out as a disjointed hybrid, part character study, part melodrama, part
nostalgia piece. Worse, the key character of the woman comes across not as
formidable and idiosyncratic but as delusional and obnoxious. Watching Greek
screen icon Melina Mercouri overact for 99 minutes is torturous, and enduring
the anything-goes directorial flourishes rendered by her real-life husband, Jules
Dassin, makes Promise at Dawn even
less palatable. One gets the sense that Dassin and Mercouri found this story charming or even magical, but it is neither. Based on a semiautobiographical
novel by Romain Gary, the film covers many years before, during, and after
World War II. Polish actress Nina Kacewa, played by Mercouri, has an
illegitimate child with fellow thespian Ivan Mosjukine, who is played by
Dassin. For various reasons, some political and some related to Nina’s erratic
nature, Nina takes her young son from Poland to France, living an nomadic
lifestyle while pummeling her boy with peculiar life lessons. “If someone
insults your mom,” she says at one point, “they must bring you home on a
stretcher.” Nina pushes him to excel at random activities, such as dancing and
ping-pong, giving a kid a complex about being destined for greatness.
At her most demented, Nina decides that Romain (played as an adult by Assi
Dayan) must kill Hitler. Promise at Dawn
is lavishly produced and pictorially impressive, but it’s a mess in terms of tone, with heavy political discourse in one scene and idiotic comic
business in the next. How the conversations about incest and rape fit into the
mix is anyone’s guess. As for the acting, Dayan gives a forgettable performance
and Mercouri gives one you’ll wish you could forget.
Promise
at Dawn: LAME
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