• LAT Home
  • |
  • My LATimes
  • |
  • Print Edition
  • |
  • All Sections
  • More Classifieds
  • |
  • Foreclosure Sale
  • |
  • Real Estate
  • |
  • Cars.com
  • |
  • Jobs
Los Angeles Times The Guide

Search LATimes

  • Restaurants
  • Bars & Clubs
  • Events
  • Music
  • Art & Museums
  • Theater & Stage
  • Outdoors
  • Movies
  • TV
  • Neighborhoods
 
calendarlive

Movies

In Movies

  • Movie Reviews
  • Movie News

Partners

Classifieds

  • Careers
  • Cars
  • Homes
  • Rentals
  • Times Guides
  • Newspaper Ads
  • Grocery Coupons
  • Personals

December 29, 2006 E-mail story   Print  

MOVIE REVIEW

'Miss Potter'

An oddball "Miss Potter" doesn't want to grow up.
 
Bestseller
Bestseller
(Alex Bailey / The Weinstein Co.)

Find Movie Showtimes & Tickets
Search by Title:
OR
By Zip Code:

Reader Reviews
-The New Twenty
-Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story
-Shoot on Sight
-Forever Strong
-Hounddog
-Garden Party

Times Reviews
-'Turning Green'
-'Died Young, Stayed Pretty,' about rock poster artists, loses focus
-'Precious' cuts deep
-Robert Zemeckis' 'Christmas Carol': Bah humbug. Too many special effects
-'The Box'
-'The Men Who Stare at Goats'
-'Araya'
-'The Fourth Kind'
-'Precious' info
-'The Box' info
-'A Christmas Carol'
-'1939 Redux': Series digs beyond the classics of 'Hollywood's Greatest Year'


 Movie Reviews
'Turning Green'
'Died Young, Stayed Pretty,' about rock poster artists, loses focus
'Precious' cuts deep
Robert Zemeckis' 'Christmas Carol': Bah humbug. Too many special effects
'The Box'
Movie Reviews section >

 Most E-mailed
'The People v. Leo Frank'
'A Serious Man'
Ghosts of Mississippi
> more e-mailed stories

By Carina Chocano, Times Staff Writer

Wander into a screening of "Miss Potter" a few minutes late to see Renée Zellweger, in a long skirt and loose bun, scribbling in a notebook while musing to herself in British-accented voice-over and you might easily mistake it for another sequel. Could it really be "Bridget Jones III: Edwardian Spinster?"

Well, no. It's "Miss Potter," an oddball rendering of the life of Beatrix Potter, the world-famous creator of Peter Rabbit and one of the bestselling children's book authors of all time. Written (originally as a musical) by lyricist and musical theater director Richard Maltby Jr. and directed by "Babe's" Chris Noonan, the movie is at once a flagrant piece of kitsch and an unexpectedly affecting story about an individual overcoming personal tragedy and brutally restrictive circumstances by talent and force of will.

ADVERTISEMENT
From the moment she appears on screen, Zellweger imbues the character with many of the same flinchy, purse-lipped mannerisms she brought to Bridget, but it soon becomes clear that Beatrix is no ordinary singleton. Thirty-six and unmarried in 1902 (though, unaccountably, the movie makes her 32 the year she published "The Tale of Peter Rabbit," because, let's face it, nobody wants to see a movie about a 36-year-old spinster, there are limits), Miss Potter talks to her illustrations as though they were real, and the adorably anthropomorphized woodland animals and bonnet-wearing fowl (to which she referred, when speaking with other adults, as her "friends") blink and scamper right back at her. This is meant to be enchanting, but kill the condescending fairy-dust score by Nigel Westlake and the next scene could easily take place at the local asylum.

The movie begins with the publishing company of Frederick Warne and Sons agreeing to take on Miss Potter's "bunny book" as a practice project for their younger brother just joining the business. The brother turns out to be Ewan McGregor. Things start looking up for Miss Potter. Norman Warne (McGregor) takes Beatrix's characters as seriously as she does and shepherds "Peter Rabbit" to unexpected success. Beatrix and Norman's sister Millie (Emily Watson) become close friends, and eventually Norman proposes — which doesn't sit well with Beatrix's wealthy, snobbish parents.

"Miss Potter" is peppered with flashbacks of Beatrix as a child (she's played by Lucy Boynton), when she apparently wrote and drew as well as she did as an adult. Despite good performances by Boynton and Oliver Jenkins as Beatrix's brother Bertram, the scenes add little more than gratuitous adorability to the movie as a whole and saddle what turns out to be a sad and ultimately inspiring story with unnecessary and simplistic psychological back story. Take away the childhood scenes, the animated sequences, the treacly score and the unaccountable forced cheer and "Miss Potter" might have been formidable. As it is, it's a maddeningly confused movie that seems to have no idea of what it wants to be when it grows up.

Still, the movie is redeemed by excellent performances. McGregor, in particular, lights up the film, and in her scenes with him, when she is not forced to interact with watercolor rabbits, Zellweger seems to wake up from a long, cranky nap. His Norman is a pure, puppyish innocent with a bounding enthusiasm for Potter's work. "I put your drawings aside with great reluctance!" he tells her on the first day he comes to her house to talk business. Watson is funny and endearing as Millie, who immediately recognizes Beatrix as a kindred spirit unlike the other unmarried daughters in their circle, who "sit around gossiping all day and unaccountably bursting into tears."

These moments make "Miss Potter" worth seeing, if you can get past the feeling that you're watching a Merchant Ivory film trapped in a Disney movie's body.

carina.chocano@latimes.com

"Miss Potter." MPAA rating: PG for brief mild language. Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes. Exclusively at Laemmle's Sunset 5, 8000 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, (323) 848-3500; Landmark's NuWilshire, 1314 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica (310) 281-8223.





To order a reprint of this article, please click here.

 
 
 

More in The Guide

Restaurants | Bars & Clubs | Events | Music | Art | Performing Arts | Movies | TV |

More on LATimes.com

California/Local | National | World | Sports | Business | Entertainment | Travel | Health | Autos | Real Estate

Classifieds

CareerBuilder.com | Cars.com | Apartments.com | OpenHouses.com | FSBO (For Sale by Owner)

Partners

ViveloHoy | KTLA | Metromix | Zap2it
Los Angeles Times
202 West 1st Street, Los Angeles, California, 90012
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Home Delivery | Permissions | Help & Services | Contact | Site Map