Regarding the new film, Lee,
Kate Winslet can’t be accused of attaching herself to a vanity project designed
to make her look good. True, she served
this biopic of World War II photojournalist Lee Miller as producer as well as
star, reportedly laboring for five years to help it come to fruition. Now this
sober but fascinating new work, a first directorial outing by veteran
cinematographer Ellen Kuras, is in theatres, giving all of us a chance to focus
on Winslet’s dedication to her subject. Her Lee is attractive enough to be a former
model (as well as the muse and lover of avant-garde artist Man Ray, among
others), and she lives her life as a expat in Europe with a kind of wild
gaiety. (At a co-ed picnic on the grass in the south of France, she’s casually
topless). But following the rise of Hitler, she leaves her partner behind in
London to work as a photojournalist, first in occupied Paris and then behind
the front lines in Germany as the War in Europe grinds to a close. This is a
woman who can’t take no for an answer, who’s determined, at all costs, to
exercise her talents and exorcize her demons.
Lee may speak fluent French, but she’s American-born, and she talks with a kind of raspy croak that perhaps hints at her future death from lung cancer. (She lights up so frequently during the film that I perversely feared moviegoers might have their lungs damaged by second-hand smoke wafting from the screen.) Never one to fuss with her appearance, she stalks through military camps and the streets of war-torn cities looking disheveled and ready to take on anyone who gets in her way. Curiously, she’s on assignment for the British edition of Vogue, a magazine much more associated with fashion trends than with war coverage. Yes, partly because the top military brass try hard to keep her away from the blood and guts of battle, she turns in her share of war photos from a woman’s perspective, like snaps of the intimate laundry of female personnel hanging from a military tent’s makeshift clothesline. But she also sees—and documents—what women go through in wartime, always showing sympathy to those (even on the enemy side) who have made the mistake of trusting male lies.
The film’s climax is Lee’s visit to the newly discovered concentration camps and railroad boxcars in which millions of Jews, dissidents, and others breathed their last. These horrific places answer for her the question of what happened to her missing French friends as well as others who were not considered acceptable by the Nazi regime. Her close-up photos of piles of rotting corpses, although at first rejected by Vogue as overly disturbing to its potential readers, are today considered invaluable documentation of what the Nazis did to hapless civilians. In the face of those atrocities, it’s hard to blame her for a slightly morbid jest: inside Hitler’s cushy former home, she cheerily photographs herself in the buff, soaking in his private bathtub.
But all was not fun and games within Lee’s personal and professional life. We’re reminded of this in the cutaways to an aged and much-diminished Lee (still feisty, still smoking) being interviewed in her farmhouse by a dapper young reporter. The last of these interview scenes reveals several things about Lee we had not expected, contributing to our sense of her as complicated indeed. It’s worth noting that family members—determined to preserve Lee’s legacy—were deeply involved the making of this film, about a woman we should all know better.
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