Coming-of-Age Drama “An Education” Is a Triumph for Director and Star (Sundance ‘09) by Steve Ramos (January 20, 2009)
A scene from Lone Scherfig's "An Education". Image courtesy of Sundance Film Festival
Much is remarkable about the sweet and wonderful coming-of-age period drama “An Education,” the latest from Danish director Lone Scherfig and the first unqualified breakout at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. For Scherfig, who remains best known for her 2000 foreign-language comedy “Italian for Beginners,” “An Education” reveals a filmmaker talented at quality, mass-appeal storytelling. Veteran novelist and screenwriter Nick Hornby (“High Fidelity,” “About a Boy”) adapts a short memoir by journalist Lynn Barber and expands it into a distinct, full-fledged script as satisfying as any of his previous stories. But its greatest surprise revolves around British actress Carey Mulligan as Jenny, the sixteen-year-old heroine of the film. Mulligan is a newcomer to most audiences and while she has strong stage and TV work as well as supporting roles in art-house movies, “An Education” is her first leading screen role. She’s fantastic, utterly believable as a schoolgirl who desperately wants to be seen as a sophisticated adult. “An Education” is an unqualified breakout because it is the rare Sundance film that’s both artistically and commercially strong. It’s a breakout because it shows the well-regarded Scherfig in a new, box-office friendly light. Finally, it’s a discovery for Mulligan, the type of career-changing performance that few actresses ever receive. Scherfig and Hornby give Mulligan the chance to shine in “An Education” but her work and talent exceed all expectations. It is 1961 and Jenny (Mulligan) is tired of her teenage life in drab suburban London with her conservative parents Jack (Alfred Molina) and Marjorie (Cara Seymour). She sees earning a place at Oxford as her best route to a cultured, sophisticated adulthood. That is, until meeting David (Peter Sarsgaard), an older, Jewish man, someone worldly beyond her imagination. With David in Jenny’s life, taking her to plush nightclubs and restaurants, her school boyfriend Graham (Matthew Beard) does not stand a chance. David even dazzles her parents with his charm. Suddenly, she has a tantalizing choice – continue to work hard for a place at Oxford or marry her charismatic although mysterious older boyfriend. Author Lynn Barber’s original story, one based on her own life, ran just 12 pages in Granta but that does not stop Hornby from expanding the story beyond Jenny’s core dilemma of whether she will land at Oxford or not.
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