The Last Station: movie review
In 'The Last Station,' Leo Tolstoy's domestic life and epic marriage is the story.
In this film publicity image released by Sony Pictures Classics, Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren are shown in a scene from, "The Last Station."
Stephan Rabold/Sony Pictures Classics/AP
One of the most difficult achievements for an actor is to realistically portray genius. Too often in the movies we are subjected to great writers or artists in the hammy throes of inspiration. Great artists are regular, plodding people, too. What鈥檚 more, their greatness is often missed in their own time.
It鈥檚 certainly not true that Count Leo Tolstoy was unrecognized in his day 鈥 he was revered as Russia鈥檚 greatest writer 鈥 but one of the terrific things about writer-director Michael Hoffman鈥檚 鈥The Last Station鈥 is that, as Christopher Plummer plays him, the old master is, of all things, a recognizable human being. He鈥檚 not an icon, at least not to himself and his adoring, long-suffering wife, Sofya, played with ravenous theatricality by Helen Mirren. The film is about many things 鈥 including the rise of quasi-socialist communes devoted to passive resistance that sprang up around Tolstoy in his final days 鈥 but it鈥檚 finally, and most successfully, about the amorous battle between the count and countess. Married 48 years, these two haul around so much history together that they鈥檙e practically an epic novel all on their own. They鈥檙e waging a war that seems right out of a novel by, well, Tolstoy.
The ostensible conflict in 鈥淭he Last Station,鈥 based on a novel by Jay Parini, is between Sofya and Chertkov (Paul Giamatti), Tolstoy鈥檚 chief disciple, who believes that the master鈥檚 works rightfully belong to the Russian people. Over Sofya鈥檚 hot-eyed objections, he wants Tolstoy to sign over his writings into the public domain, and, to grease this agenda, he arranges for a young acolyte, Valentin Bulgakov (James McAvoy), to become Tolstoy鈥檚 assistant. Bulgakov is supposed to be acting as Chertkov鈥檚 spy, but most of the time he鈥檚 too gaga to provide much useful intelligence. The self-denial implicit in Tolstoy鈥檚 neo-海角大神, neomystical agrarianism doesn鈥檛 jibe with the sensuous world he鈥檚 surrounded by 鈥 especially in the form of Masha (Kerry Condon), another acolyte with a rather loose sense of self-abnegation.
This Bulgakov-Chertkov narrative is entertaining but also somewhat callow. McAvoy is never entirely convincing 鈥 he seems too coltish and contemporaneous to be a true believer circa 1910 鈥 and Giamatti lets his moustache do much of his acting for him. (He鈥檚 one of the few actors who is still worth watching even when he鈥檚 overdoing it 鈥 Nicolas Cage is another 鈥 but Hoffman could still have brought him down a notch.) Even if these scenes were better, they wouldn鈥檛 stand up to the Plummer-Mirren grand opera. Every time we are taken away from these two, a terrific movie plummets into OK-ness. (It鈥檚 how I felt watching 鈥淛ulie & Julia鈥 every time we switched to Julie.)
Plummer鈥檚 Tolstoy, with his big beard and big rheumy eyes, is still startlingly alive in his 80s. The funniest, and truest, joke in the movie is that Tolstoy, despite his philosophical revulsion for worldly things, is irreducibly grounded in earthy pleasures. He鈥檚 as imposing a physical presence as the stout trees that cleave the grounds of his estate.
In her own way, Sofya matches him pound for pound (and line for line). This is a woman who, after all, gave her husband 13 children and, perhaps even more impressive, copied out 鈥淲ar and Peace鈥 for him six times. Whether she is staging fainting spells or throwing herself into ponds, Sofya is always intensely aware of the effect she is having on Tolstoy. When he makes his break with her and she follows him, against Chertkov鈥檚 admonitions, to his death bed, we can see in their eyes how much love/hate has coursed between them. 鈥淭he Last Station鈥 isn鈥檛 all that it should be, but whenever these two actors are onscreen, it鈥檚 like a great night at the theater. Grade: A- (Rated R for a scene of sexuality/nudity.)