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Elegy

By ELLA TAYLOR

Published on August 26, 2008 at 1:16pm

It's May-December time again, and for an aging dude who scores one of the ripest young lovelies in cinema (Penelope Cruz), Ben Kingsley looks mighty down in the mouth. Kingsley pulls another of his wooden-faced Sphinx routines as David Kepesh, a skirt-chasing professor who gets his comeuppance from Cruz's Consuela, the luscious Cuban-American graduate student with whom he falls in love. Spanish director Isabel Coixet's Elegy is a flat, joyless affair, not just because of the total absence of carnal spark between Kingsley and Cruz — absurdly infantilized in bangs and a headband — but because it's adapted (faithfully, up to a crucial point, by Nicholas Meyer) from The Dying Animal, one of Philip Roth's least successful efforts to come to grips with male helplessness before what he calls "the tyranny of beauty." Funereally lit, the movie sags beneath fatally tasteful shots of Kingsley's profile in half-shadow, remorseful after his departed lover returns with a request he fears will unman him. The whole dreary story is enlivened only by excellent supporting performances from Peter Sarsgaard, Dennis Hopper and Patricia Clarkson. The softened ending is a travesty against Roth, even at his flawed second-best.



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