Their Finest review: Gemma Arterton at her best in crowd pleasing British Second World War movie
The former Bond girl takes on the men behind the camera as she plays a screenwriter trying to rally the troops with a film about Dunkirk
By Chris Hunneysett, The Mirror April 19, 2017, 19:10
Gemma Arterton takes the lead role (Photo: PA Photo/Lionsgate)
Gemma Arterton makes movie magic in this hugely entertaining Second World War comedy drama.
The actress deploys her ample talent as Catrin, a writer who inadvertently wages a one-woman war on sexism in the British film industry.
It’s a gift of a role which makes the most of her ability to be warm, vulnerable, smart and sexy.
Meanwhile, wily old trouper Bill Nighy leads a first class platoon of homegrown supporting talent, which includes Helen McCrory, Eddie Marsan, Richard E. Grant and Jeremy Irons.
Gemma Arterton and Bill Nighy are part of a star cast (Photo: PA/Lionsgate)
Working though the Blitz, Catrin discovers looking like a Bond girl in a male dominated environment provides additional hazards.
Equipped with a wedding ring, a thick skin and a desire to succeed, she shares a small office with the cynical senior writer, Tom, played by the dependable Sam Claflin.
They must concoct a screenplay celebrating an heroic episode from the evacuation of Dunkirk. But their work is complicated when they discover the ‘facts’ involved in their story are not as have been reported in the press.
With deception a key to filmmaking, especially with propaganda, Their Finest explores the way great fictions can reveal even larger truths, and looks at the way lies are employed to serve a greater good.
Sam Claflin and Gemma Atterton in a scene from "Their Finest".
But the tone is never strident and the story is never neglected. Plus, there’s a lot of fun with the mechanics and tricks of filmmaking, and affectionate spoofs of the period style of cinema.
Confident and sure-footed, the script is adapted from Lissa Evans’s 2009 novel “Their Finest Hour and a Half.” Their Finest is a World War II comedy that, despite its light hand, never compromises the grief and loss that lie at its core. It's an inspirational tale that reaches an empowering conclusion.
Handsomely photographed, wonderfully played and full of humour, this is a thoroughly British crowd pleaser. All the more surprising then, it was directed by a Dane, the talented Lone Scherfig.
Watching the film within a film is one of the delights of 'Their Finest.'