Burmese Hero Aung San Suu Kyi s Story Told in The Lady Movie Review
Burmese Hero Aung San Suu Kyi's Story Told in The Lady - Movie Review Movies for Grownups
Director: Luc Besson
Rated: R. Running Time: 132 minutes
Stars: Michelle Yeoh, David Thewlis The Lady is based on real events. It’s a within a political epic, but in the shaky hands of director Luc Besson — who is best known for action films such as The Taken and The Professional — it fails to fully satisfy as either. The romance between the leading characters — one that sacrifices itself for a greater purpose — is too undeveloped on an emotional level, and the is too quiet, too plodding (132 minutes in all, albeit a nonlinear recounting) and too safe. See also: Much of the film’s story of the 21st century democracy movement in Burma is told in flashback, beginning in the late 1940s when the pro-independence general Aung Sun is assassinated. His only daughter, Aung San Suu Kyi, played by the exquisitely talented Michelle Yeoh (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), subsequently marries Oxford Asian Studies expert Michael Aris (British character actor David Thewlis), and the couple are living in England with their two young boys when Suu Kyi is beckoned back to Rangoon to her mother’s deathbed in 1988.
Movie Review ' The Lady'
Director allows history to overshadow Burmese hero Aung San Suu Kyi' s powerful love story
Director: Luc Besson
Rated: R. Running Time: 132 minutes
Stars: Michelle Yeoh, David Thewlis The Lady is based on real events. It’s a within a political epic, but in the shaky hands of director Luc Besson — who is best known for action films such as The Taken and The Professional — it fails to fully satisfy as either. The romance between the leading characters — one that sacrifices itself for a greater purpose — is too undeveloped on an emotional level, and the is too quiet, too plodding (132 minutes in all, albeit a nonlinear recounting) and too safe. See also: Much of the film’s story of the 21st century democracy movement in Burma is told in flashback, beginning in the late 1940s when the pro-independence general Aung Sun is assassinated. His only daughter, Aung San Suu Kyi, played by the exquisitely talented Michelle Yeoh (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), subsequently marries Oxford Asian Studies expert Michael Aris (British character actor David Thewlis), and the couple are living in England with their two young boys when Suu Kyi is beckoned back to Rangoon to her mother’s deathbed in 1988.