“The man I bought it from explained to me that when a man
gives it to his wife, they become two halves of the same person. Nothing can
separate them... not even death.” ~ Roman Strauss
“Well, I’m not going into hiding, Mr. Baker. I’m just
getting married.” ~ Margaret Strauss
“Aren’t you afraid of dying?” ~ Gray Baker
“Karmically,
self-defense is quite cool.” ~ Cozy Carlisle
“Oh, and you don’t have to worry about forgetting her name.
She’s already forgotten it for you.” ~ Pete
“This is fate we’re talking about, and if fate works at all,
it works because people think that this
time, it isn’t going to happen.” ~ Madson
“Grace? That’s what the teabag says? That my name is Grace?”
~ Grace
“I’m not looking for Miss Right. I’m looking for Miss Right
Now.” ~ Mike Church
Dead Again is an
unlikely mix of genres, bringing together elements of romantic fantasy and the
supernatural with a good deal of film noir influences in this 1991 film from
director Kenneth Branagh. The director stars in dual roles opposite his then
wife Emma Thompson, who was also playing a dual role in a story that combines
the mystery of an amnesiac woman with the notion of connections to past lives.
With a good supporting cast, the film is quite entertaining, romantic, thrilling at
times, stylish, and clever.
The film opens with newspaper headlines through the opening
titles, detailing the 1949 murder of Margaret Strauss (Thompson), a classical
musician stabbed during a robbery at her home. Her composer and conductor
husband Roman (Branagh) is arrested and put on trial in the months that follow.
Found guilty, he is sentenced to be executed. Before his execution, he is
visited by a reporter, Gray Baker (Andy Garcia), who was acquainted with the
couple.
Forty years later, an amnesiac woman (Thompson) has turned
up at an orphanage, unable to speak, and plagued by nightmares. The priest who
runs the place calls in a private detective who grew up in the orphanage, Mike
Church (Branagh) to determine who she is. Church asks his friend Pete (Wayne
Knight) to publish her photo in the newspaper to see if her family is looking
for her. An antique dealer, Madson, with a sideline in hypnosis, approaches
Church with an offer to help, and the first session determines that she can in
fact speak- and is able to relive in third person the story of Roman and
Margaret. It seems the tragedies of the past are coming back into the present
through past lives.
The story is by Scott Frank, whose other work includes Get Shorty, Out Of Sight, Heaven’s
Prisoners, The Wolverine, and Logan. The
story weaves back and forth between past and present, primarily acting as a
mystery, with elements of the familiar private eye genre as a strong influence.
The cynical detective, the mysterious woman, the oddball characters, these are
all aspects that nod back to the Forties era of hard boiled private eyes in cinema,
as does the somewhat dark sense of humour throughout the film. And the
narrative weaves in a love story (two, actually) and more to the point the
unusual premise of past lives influences the current day, particularly in the
sense of the inevitability of fate.
Branagh was already well established as a Shakespearean
actor and director on stage and screen at this point- his masterpiece
adaptation of Henry V was two years
behind him when he directed this film. It has a theatrical quality in its
pacing, fitting Roman’s character, since the man is a composer of dramatic
opera. The theatrical quality carries over in the rest of the film, as the
mystery unfolds, and particularly in the climactic aspects of the film, and
Branagh’s directing style plays to that. I particularly like the use of black
and white for those scenes set in the past (which mostly unfold in flashback
through hypnosis) and colour for the present day sequences, as well as how he
uses several scenes that are extended single take scenes.
The production values
are particularly effective in the past sequences, with a palatial residence
well outfitted to look like a place out of the 1940s, or a masquerade party at
the time looking quite at home in the past. And one of the prevailing visual
themes- scissors- are carried over into the present in a creative way. Branagh
uses some actors to play smaller parts in both past and present, including his
frequent music collaborator Patrick Doyle, whose score for this film mixes
together romantic, mysterious, and highly theatrical themes along the way.
The cast are exceptional in their roles. Hanna Schygulla
appears mostly in flashbacks as the Strauss housekeeper Inga, who escaped from
Germany with Roman and her son during the darkest days of the Second World War and has been
loyal ever since. She has to play the character with a certain degree of
distance as the film goes along- the audience isn't meant to get inside her head.
Another character who spans both past and present is Gray Baker,
played by Andy Garcia. When we first meet him, he’s a young reporter with a
cynical world view, fondness for smoking, and a womanizing attitude. This
carries over into his interactions with Margaret and Roman, as he doesn’t show
much respect at all for boundaries. Garcia makes him thoroughly jaded in his
performance, and when we see him in the present day, he’s a wreck of a man,
ruined by smoking, but still as jaded as ever. His present day appearance could be said to be the best cinematic argument against smoking.
Robin Williams gets a cameo appearance as Cozy Carlisle.
Where Baker is jaded, Carlisle is bitter and acerbic in a way that makes the
reporter seem happy. A disgraced therapist who comes into the plot as the
subject of a routine search by Church early on, he’s a man with little in the
way of scruples, no ethics, unconventional ideas, and the source of much of the
dark humour of the film’s present day sequences. Williams gives the character a
bleak, serious air in the way he plays it- Carlisle’s not a pleasant person,
nor does he pretend to be.
Wayne Knight is best known for a couple of roles, the opportunistic
hacker Dennis in Jurassic Park and as
the perpetual irritant Newman in the Seinfeld
series. Here he plays a very different character as Pete Dugan, the
newspaper staffer who’s best friends with Church. He’s loyal and friendly, a
genuinely likable guy, with an ironic sense of humour and something of a speech
impediment. Knight gives the character a lot of levity as he goes along.
Derek Jacobi is a frequent collaborator with Branagh, having
had co-starred with him in films like Henry
V and Hamlet, as well as being in
the cast for Branagh’s directed Cinderella.
He gives the role of the antique dealer Madson a dry air. When we first
meet him, he’s hypnotizing a woman at his shop for one reason, while gathering
information on potential jackpots for himself. It’s a bit underhanded but
amusing, the act of a grifter, but a good way to introduce a character. Madson explains his interest in past lives and how they can influence
present day actions. Past life regression through hypnosis is key to unlocking
the secrets of the story, and the actor plays the character with dignity but
secrecy, playing things close to the vest.
Emma Thompson gets the challenge of two roles- Margaret
Strauss in the past and the woman known as Grace in the present. Her Margaret
is playful but professional, quickly falling for the conductor Roman, and the
bond between them becomes believable as their story unfolds. Grace is a
different story- she starts out as plagued by nightmares, in a vulnerable state,
not knowing who she is or what’s happening to her. And yet under that, as the
story goes along, the actress gives Grace a different kind of playfulness,
mixed with uncertainty as she falls for the private detective who’s trying to
determine what’s happened to her. The chemistry between the actors, in both eras, works very well indeed.
Branagh also gets to play two roles, giving Roman a certain
amount of distance when we first meet him- we’re meant to wonder at his guilt.
The character has his stormy, frustrated side that seems to fit in with his
composer profession. Mike Church is a different character altogether, a private
eye who tends to see the worst in people. He’s a cynic, but not above taking in
a stray- a true cynic might be inclined to leave the amnesiac in a mental
hospital, but he doesn’t, so this cynic has principles. Branagh plays the two
characters in different ways, and Church, who finds the supernatural idea of
past lives to be laughable at first, must come to terms with the idea of it as
it becomes less implausible and fate closes in on him.
Dead Again got
mostly positive reviews and box office at the time, and the film itself is
stylish, moody, smart, entertaining, and dramatic, fitting the acting credentials of
its leads. It’s a well paced film that skilfully goes back and forth between
past and present, giving two lead actors the chance to play two roles across
two lifetimes. It’s a hidden treat you might not know of personally, but it’s
well worth seeing.