I very much enjoyed this movie--I do love both Ewan McGregor and
Kristin Scott Thomas. They have each played a wide range of characters
in a number of movies and done so with intelligence and skill. So I was
predisposed to enjoy this.
The story is that a sheik
in Yemen who has a lot of disposable income and a passion for fishing
wants to bring a change to Yemen. The vehicle of change is to create a
habitat that would support salmon, which in turn would mean bringing
water--the classic story of irrigating the dessert.
Harriet
(Emily Blunt) is the person the sheik works with to find the people who
will make his dream a reality, and Fred (Ewan McGregor) is the salmon
scientist--and fly fisherman--who is the brains behind what they will
need to make it happen. The British government, desperate to have some
good press about British-Arab relations that doesn't involve
embarrassment on their part is part of the grease that eases this
project forward.
Harriet and Fred are involved with
other people, and they are not people who sleep around. So when they
start to have feelings for each other it is complicated--they do not
rush head long into an affair. Instead they talk with their respective
significant others and move slowly in terms of each other. It is good
relationship etiquette, which you so rarely see exemplified in either
movies or books. The project (which is a fantasy, to be sure) is not
welcomed with open arms and at points is actively sabotaged by the local
people. It is a small lesson in diplomacy as well, when it finishes
up--how to go about change, who to involve, and how fast to move. Very
fun movie, light, and yet you are left with things to think about.
Friday, September 28, 2012
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