Entertainment

Damon Smith reviews the latest new releases to watch in cinemas...

Damon Smith reviews the latest new releases to watch in cinemas. This week: Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Vicky Krieps) seeks to break free of societal restraints in the period drama Corsage...

Robert Duvall as Jean Pepe, Christian Bale as Augustus Landor and Harry Melling as Edgar Allen Poe in The Pale Blue Eye
Robert Duvall as Jean Pepe, Christian Bale as Augustus Landor and Harry Melling as Edgar Allen Poe in The Pale Blue Eye

CORSAGE (15, 114 mins) Drama/Romance. Vicky Krieps, Florian Teichtmeister, Aaron Friesz, Colin Morgan, Katharina Lorenz, Jeanne Werner, Rosa Hajjaj. Director: Marie Kreutzer.

Released: December 26 (UK & Ireland, selected cinemas)

A WOMAN’S worth is measured by her beauty in writer-director Marie Kreutzer’s unromanticised character study of Empress Elisabeth of Austria, which dramatises a turbulent period when the noblewoman became profoundly aware of the ravages of time.

“At the age of 40, a person begins to disperse and fade, darkening like a cloud,” she ruminates sombrely in voiceover, barely allowing food to pass her lips at formal dinners where impeccably dressed guests chirrup about the media’s infatuation with Her Majesty.

Parallels to Princess Diana are inevitable.

Kreutzer’s script doesn’t slavishly curry favour or sympathy for Elisabeth.

She is occasionally unkind with words and impulsive, dangerously so when the empress hauls her young daughter out of bed in the dead of night for a horseback ride that leaves the girl battling a fever.

“I don’t want you to pass on your recklessness to our child,” seethes the emperor.

Vicky Krieps is beguiling in the lead role, delivering a nuanced performance that paints Elisabeth as both a victim of her suffocating times and her own worst enemy.

She glides serenely through impeccably dressed sets like a porcelain doll who might break at any moment, hanging on fleeting compliments about her countenance as validation of her self-destructive behaviour.

In 1877 Vienna, Empress Elisabeth (Krieps) lingers in melancholy in a separate wing to her husband Emperor Franz Joseph I (Florian Teichtmeister), perpetually at the mercy of gossip-mongering newspapers that fixate on her appearance.

Tightly corseted by societal expectations that dictate how a woman should behave, the empress stands silently as ladies in waiting meticulously document daily fluctuations in weight, fuelling a corrosive sense of self-worth based on her waist size.

The royal palace is devoid of joy. One chamber is a shrine to the couple’s daughter Sophie, who died at the age of two.

Stifled by the Habsburg court, Elisabeth travels to Northamptonshire in the spring of 1878 to visit her sister in the company of her son Crown Prince Rudolf (Aaron Friesz) and daughter Valerie (Rosa Hajjaj).

The Empress craves affection and she risks more scurrilous rumours by savouring a simmering flirtation with riding instructor Bay (Colin Morgan).

“You abandon yourself to every whim without considering your position,” remonstrates her son, who will inherit the throne and his mother’s legacy.

Corsage is a richly textured portrait of a woman who was ahead of her time but all too familiar in a modern era that filters so-called reality for rabid consumption on social media.

Krieps effortlessly embraces the script’s multiple languages, gelling with female co-stars to embolden the bonds of sisterly solidarity between Elisabeth and clucky courtiers, who were her confidants.

French singer-songwriter Camille’s anachronistic soundtrack is hauntingly seductive, especially the song “She Was”, delivered in a breathless style reminiscent of Billie Eilish.

RATING: 8/10

THE PALE BLUE EYE (15, 128 mins)

Released: December 23 (UK & Ireland, selected cinemas) and streaming on Netflix from January 6

EARLIER this year, Christian Bale turned detective in David O Russell’s madcap murder mystery Amsterdam inspired by a real-life political conspiracy in pre-Second World War America.

The Haverfordwest-born Oscar winner steps back in time to 1830 for writer-director Scott Cooper’s grisly thriller based on the book by Louis Bayard.

Senior figures at West Point military academy are shocked when a cadet is found dead in the early hours of the morning and the mortician discovers the deceased man’s heart has been removed from his chest.

Local detective Augustus Landor (Christian Bale) is enlisted to quietly solve the case without damaging West Point’s reputation.

A code of silence between cadets thwarts Landor’s efforts to unmask the perpetrator so he joins force with a trainee called Edgar Allan Poe (Harry Melling), who is openly disdainful of the military and its traditions.

Gillian Anderson, Lucy Boynton, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Toby Jones and Timothy Spall co-star.

Damon Smith