SEVEN YEARS IN TIBET A film review by Steve Rhodes Copyright 1997 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****): **
As a travelogue of a vast and magical kingdom, SEVEN YEARS IN TIBET lives up to its billing. Unfortunately, as a story, it flags much more often than it inspires. Although it hits many of the highlights of recent Tibetan history, the vacuousness of Becky Johnston's script, based on Heinrich Harrer's autobiographical book, leaves one strangely unmoved. In good Hollywood fashion, the movie has a twin so perhaps the other Tibetan film this year will prove to have more substance.
Besides the snow capped Tibetan mountains, viewers have sandy topped Brad Pitt to stare at. With a sometimes all too cute Austrian accent, he delivers as much as can be expected in such an underdeveloped and overlong production.
As Austrian mountain climber Heinrich Harrer, Pitt plays a self-absorbed character who in 1939 leaves his very pregnant wife to scale a Himalayan mountain. It was a matter of German pride Heinrich points out since several climbers had already died in failed attempts to make it to the summit. Peter Aufschnaiter, the expedition leader, grows tired of Heinrich's bravado when it threatens the group's success. David Thewlis from BLACK BEAUTY plays Peter with precision but little emotion. The genuinely harrowing visuals of their climbs provide the few completely captivating moments of the film.
On the way down the mountain, Heinrich and Peter along with the other members of the expedition are captured by the British and made prisoners of war. Heinrich spends the next few years becoming the joke of the prison camp as he tries again and again to escape but with no success. As an apolitical figure, Heinrich is non-plussed. "I have nothing to do with your silly war," he tells his captors. (The recent revelations that Heinrich was a storm trooper and a member of Hitler's SS may cause some viewers to flinch at his protests of political innocence.)
As Heinrich rots in prison, his wife sends him divorce papers to sign. His letters from prison to his son represent the film's escape from its otherwise prosaic language. Lyrically poetic, his letters contain powerful passages. In one he describes the Himalayas as "a place rich with all the strange beauty of your nighttime dreams."
About halfway through the movie, Heinrich and Peter finally escape and eventually find themselves in the home of the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama, played as an inquisitive teenager by Jamyang Wang Chuck, thinks Heinrich is really cool and pumps him for info about topics ranging from Molotov cocktails to Jack the Ripper. These excessively cute scenes dominate the story's latter half, and the almost total destruction of Tibet seems, in contrast, almost tacked on as an afterthought.
Except for the mountain climbing sequences, French Director Jean-Jacques Annaud (THE BEAR) has as much trouble with the action sequences as the more intimate moments. The film's few minutes of war footage are filmed by Robert Fraisse in a blur with the rapid pans of a purposely shaky, handheld camera. The effect of this choreography leaves the audience more confused than moved.
Most movies have a part where suspension of disbelief is essential. Here it comes when the only beautiful woman in the city chooses the homely Thewlis over the body beautiful Pitt.
The story is not without its humor as when the workers stop construction of the Dalai Lama's movie palace. A perplexed Heinrich, who is in charge of the project, finds out the reason. The workers have discovered worms in the soil that might be killed by the digging. "In a past life this worm could have been your mother," the worker explains.
"Your shame will be your torture, and your torture will be your life," Heinrich tells a Tibetan traitor. "I wish it long." The film's epic length is the audience's torture. One gentlemen in ours snored loudly in a soporific protest of the film's languid pace.
The show has no ending. In the last twenty minutes it winds down slowly like a tape player with a dying battery.
"Do you think someday people will get Tibet on their movie screens and wonder what happened to us?" asks the Dalai Lama at one point in the story. It was a sadly prophetic question that hopefully the other Tibetan film this year will be able to address much better than this mediocre one.
SEVEN YEARS IN TIBET runs 2:19. It is rated PG-13 for war violence and mature themes. The film would fine for kids nine and up, but will probably bore those under 13. I loved the film's grandeur, but found the text too insubstantial to be able to recommend the picture. I give the film ** for the picturesque images.
**** = A must see film. *** = Excellent show. Look for it. ** = Average movie. Kind of enjoyable. * = Poor show. Don't waste your money. 0 = Totally and painfully unbearable picture.
REVIEW WRITTEN ON: October 10, 1997
Opinions expressed are mine and not meant to reflect my employer's.
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