Damage (1992 film)

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Damage
Damageposter.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed byLouis Malle
Screenplay byDavid Hare
Based onDamage
by Josephine Hart
Produced byLouis Malle
Starring
Music byZbigniew Preisner
Production
company
Distributed byNew Line Cinema
Release date
  • 9 December 1992 (1992-12-09) (France)
  • 5 February 1993 (1993-02-05) (UK)
Running time
111 minutes
CountriesUnited Kingdom
France
Languages
Box office$31 million[1]

Damage is a 1992 film directed and produced by Louis Malle and starring Jeremy Irons, Juliette Binoche, Miranda Richardson, Rupert Graves, and Ian Bannen. Adapted by David Hare from the novel Damage by Josephine Hart, the film is about a British politician (Irons) who has a sexual relationship with his son's soon-to-be fiancée and becomes increasingly obsessed with her. Richardson was nominated for an Academy Award and won a BAFTA in the category of Best Supporting Actress for her performance as the aggrieved wife of the film's main character.

Plot[]

Dr. Stephen Fleming (Irons), a physician who has entered politics and become a minister, lives in London with wife Ingrid (Richardson) and daughter Sally (Clarke). Their adult son, Martyn (Graves), a young journalist, lives elsewhere in London. At a reception, Stephen meets a young woman, named Anna Barton (Binoche), daughter of a British diplomat and four-times married Frenchwoman (Caron), who "lives in Palm Springs". Anna, who works at Sotheby's, introduces herself as a close friend of Martyn's: they are instantly attracted to each other. Some time later, Martyn brings Anna to meet his parents at their elegant town house and reveals they are romantically involved. The sexual tension between Stephen and Anna is apparent, although Martyn and his mother seem unaware.

After Anna calls his office, Stephen goes to her mews flat, where they have sex. The following day, Martyn is promoted and Ingrid arranges a celebratory dinner. There, Ingrid seems suspicious and interrogates Anna about her childhood. Anna says her brother, a year older, committed suicide at 16 over "Love." After dinner, Martyn drives Anna home and Stephen follows them. Once Martyn leaves, Stephen enters and tells Anna how much he "wanted to touch her during dinner". They have sex on the floor and in the bed. Anna describes her brother's death, after he had expressed incestuous desire, saying "he wanted me all to himself and not to grow up." She says damaged people are dangerous and she hates possessiveness. Stephen's obsession with Anna deepens; on a whim, he leaves a conference in Brussels to go to Paris where Anna is spending the weekend with Martyn. While Martyn sleeps, Stephen and Anna have sex in a doorway. Afterwards, Stephen moves opposite Anna and Martyn, spying on them. He now wants to be with Anna permanently, even if it destroys his family. Anna dissuades him, assuring him that, as long as she is with Martyn he will always have access to her.

Visiting Anna's home, Stephen finds Peter Wetzler (Stormare), who tells Stephen that he and Anna are former lovers. A jealous Stephen assumes Anna is cheating, and, when Peter leaves, returns and confronts her. Anna denies it and recounts that, when she witnessed her brother's suicide, she had fled to Peter and slept with him as a reaction. Stephen is placated and they have sex. The Flemings visit Ingrid's father, Edward Lloyd (Bannen), who has acted as Stephen's political mentor, to celebrate her birthday. Martyn announces that Anna has accepted his proposal of marriage, which visibly disturbs Stephen. That night, Sally observes him leaving Anna's room. An anxious Stephen lies about it, telling Sally he was talking to Anna about the marriage because Ingrid was upset. Later, the Flemings have lunch with Anna's mother, Elizabeth, who disparages the marriage, saying that Martyn doesn't seem like Anna's 'usual type' but noting how closely he resembles Anna's dead brother. Elizabeth notices the strained behavior between Anna and Stephen. She deduces the affair and warns Stephen to end it.

Stephen initially complies and calls Anna to end their relationship. He tries to confess to Martyn and Ingrid, separately, but fails. Stephen instead succumbs to temptation and phones Anna but hangs up when Martyn answers. Anna sends a key to Stephen's office, with the address of a flat where they can meet. She tells Stephen that she could not marry Martyn without being with him. They meet at the flat and begin another tryst, but Martyn — having discovered about the flat by chance — finds them in bed. Stunned, he accidentally falls over a railing to his death. A devastated Stephen clutches him while Anna silently leaves.

Stephen's affair is exposed and becomes a media frenzy, with reporters outside his house. An anguished Ingrid questions whether he had ever loved her and tells him she wishes they had never met. "Everyone only has one person in life," she says. "Mine was Martyn and yours was Anna."

Stephen resigns his government position, just as he was due to join the cabinet, and parliamentary seat. Meeting Anna's mother, he discovers Anna is staying with her, but he and Anna are silent in their last meeting. Stephen, leaving his wife and daughter, retires to a rented room in a southern European town. In narration, he reveals that he saw Anna only once more, in passing at an airport, and that she has a child with Peter. Stephen stares at a huge blowup on his wall of a photo Martyn gave him of Stephen, Anna and Martyn together. He ends with a calm note: "She is no different from anyone else."

Cast[]

Reception[]

Damage holds a rating of 78% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 23 reviews, with a weighted average of 6.86/10.[3]

Box office[]

The film was released in the United States on 23 December 1992 and grossed $140,777 in four theatres in its first five days. It went on to gross $7,532,911 in the US and Canada.[4] The film grossed £1,908,050 in the United Kingdom.[citation needed] Outside of the United States it grossed over $23 million, for a worldwide total of over $31 million.[1]

Awards and nominations[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Klady, Leonard (3 January 1994). "Int'l top 100 earn $8 bil". Variety. p. 1.
  2. ^ "WalesOnline - RugbyNation - Scarlets - Ray Gravell: Man of the people". WalesOnline website. Media Wales Ltd. 4 November 2007. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  3. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/damage
  4. ^ "Box office mojo".

External links[]

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