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Betrayal
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Directed by David Jones.
Director David Jones adapted Harold Pinter's play of the same name -- with the help of Pinter himself -- to better fit this chronologically reversed drama of love and betrayal to the medium of film. The action starts with a scene in a London pub in which Jerry (Jeremy Irons) and Emma (Patricia Hodge) hold a subtly sardonic conversation on the nature of human failings as they meet for the first time after the end of their affair. The next scene, introduced by an intertitle, details how their romance fizzled and is followed by the next vignette, one year earlier, on how Jerry broke the news to Emma's husband Robert (Ben Kingsley) that he and Emma were lovers. And so it continues, through a total of nine scenes, back to the beginning of a complex, interpersonal drama. The film benefits considerably from Kingsley and Irons as the lead males, and the backwards story is in no way hard to follow. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Adapted by Harold Pinter from his play, Betrayal (1983) recounts the story of a failed love affair in reverse chronological order, belying the fantasy that love conquers all. Beginning with a meeting between the former adulterous lovers a year after their break-up, and ending with the first fleeting acknowledgment of their attraction, the narrative is progressively clouded by the end of the affair between Emma (Patricia Hodge) and Jerry (Jeremy Irons), but also by the revelation of their treachery to Robert, Emma's husband and Jerry's best friend (Ben Kingsley). Pinter and director David Jones add poignancy to the relationship through the foreknowledge of its failure, turning the story's mystery into how the affair ended rather than how it will turn out. The superbly nuanced performances by the star trio similarly tap into the conflicted emotions of the couple's betrayal and the husband's double wronging. Voted Best Picture of the Year by the National Board of Review, Betrayal also earned Pinter an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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