My Cousin Rachel is gripping
drama, to be sure. Does it stay with you? I am not certain. My knowledge of the
story was restricted to what Wikipedia had to offer, which, of course, is
little but the bare skeleton to go by. But optimism was high about the promise
of a dark tale, given my experience with Rebecca, also by Daphne du Maurier, which
is a story that occasionally haunts me to date.
And to that extent, My Cousin
Rachel, was a deep disappointment. For what could have been a layered drama
full of hints and unresolved moments, the film is a little too much of a
straight arrow. The story really starts with a letter received by a young man,
Ashley, from his elder cousin Ambrose, who brought him up after he lost his
parents early in life. Ambrose, who had been unwell, went from Cornwall (England)
to Florence (Italy) to get better. There he meets their cousin Rachel, a widow,
who he marries. But soon his letters become fearful of Rachel’s role in his
life, and he eventually asks Ashley to come to Florence. On reaching there,
Ashley discovers that Ambrose has already died, and grief stricken, he swears
to get his revenge on Rachel, who he believes is responsible for his beloved
cousin’s death.
Rachel turns up soon enough at
his place, and no sooner has he met her that Ashley is drawn in by her relaxed,
affectionate personality, which wins over everyone around her as well. Soon all
thoughts of revenge are all but forgotten and as their relationship grows
thicker, Ashley transfers the property to Rachel, in a grand show of love to
her. But she turns him down, and he keeps discovering more letters from his
dead cousin that accuse Rachel.
The question ultimately is: Is
she really a devil hiding behind an angel? Or is she truly innocent, having
been implicated by an ill man’s paranoia? I am guessing the film was supposed
to leave the viewer, as much as Ashley himself, with these haunting questions.
Except, that it doesn’t.
The manner of the film is such,
that you don’t really feel that Rachel is indeed a scheming killer, but that
Ashley is driven to the brink as much by his own passions for her as his grief
at losing his only real family. Not much psychological drama there, then. Pity,
that, given how well the actors play their parts, how fitting the locales are
and how engrossing the tale had potential to be.
Fem Review: Whether real or imaginary, this is one story that fully
explores the potential of the female psyche, from a point of realism, and not
cardboard stereotypes. Nice.
P.S. Chris Isaak’s 1990 song ‘Wicked
Game’ has been redone as a trailer song for My Cousin Rachel, its quite the
cover.
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