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Damage (1992 film)

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Damage
Theatrical poster
Directed byLouis Malle
Screenplay byDavid Hare
Produced byLouis Malle
StarringJeremy Irons
Juliette Binoche
Miranda Richardson
Music byZbigniew Preisner
Distributed byNew Line Cinema
Release date
  • 2 December 1992 (1992-12-02)
Running time
111 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film UK
LanguagesEnglish
French
Box office$7,532,911[1]

Damage, also known as Fatale, is a 1992 film directed by Louis Malle. It is based on the novel Damage by Josephine Hart. The plot is about a politician who falls in love with his son's girlfriend.

Miranda 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, a British cabinet minister, lives a pleasant life with wife Ingrid and young daughter Sally. His older son, Martyn, is a rising journalist. At a party, Stephen meets a young half-French woman named Anna Barton, who introduces herself as a close friend of Martyn's; it is immediately apparent, however, that Stephen and Anna are intensely attracted to each other. When Martyn visits his parents in London, he brings Anna with him; they are romantically involved. The sexual tension between Stephen and Anna is clear, though their respective mates are oblivious to this. Despite her relationship with Martyn, Anna arranges a tryst with Stephen at her apartment.

Stephen becomes obsessed with Anna. After an international summit adjourns in Brussels, he travels to Paris to meet her instead of going home. While Martyn is still sleeping in a Paris hotel room, Stephen and Anna have sex in an open doorway in broad daylight. Afterwards, Stephen checks into a hotel across the street from Anna's, so he can spy on her and Martyn through his window. Eventually, Stephen's infatuation with Anna reaches a point where he desires to be with her permanently, even at the risk of destroying his relationship with his son. Anna dissuades Stephen from doing this, reassuring him that as long as she is with Martyn, he will always have access to her.

During a visit to Anna's apartment, Stephen finds that another man named Peter has already arrived. Peter — unaware of Stephen's affair with Anna — tells him that they are former lovers. A jealous Stephen initially assumes that Anna is cheating on him and, when Peter leaves, confronts her about his presence. Anna denies carrying on with Peter, and then describes in detail the death of her brother, who had committed suicide after becoming obsessed with her. She recounts that she had compulsively slept with Peter in order to grieve over her brother's death, which she had witnessed. Stephen is placated by this explanation, and the couple engage in passionate sex.

The Flemings travel to their country estate to celebrate Ingrid's birthday. During a meal there, Martyn announces his engagement to Anna, which visibly disturbs Stephen. That night, after Stephen receives oral sex from Anna, Sally — fetching a glass of water — catches them outside of Anna's room. Soon after, an anxious Stephen lies to Sally about what she saw, telling her that he was merely trying to console Anna about the upcoming marriage. Later, the Flemings have an awkward lunch with Anna's mother, who notices the tension between Anna and Stephen. She correctly deduces that they are having an affair and, during a car ride with Stephen, warns him to put an end to it.

Stephen initially complies and calls Anna to end their relationship. He tries to confess his misdeeds to both Martyn and Ingrid, but shies away from doing so both times. However, after Stephen succumbs to temptation and anonymously phones Anna's apartment, she mails him keys to a renovated flat where they can continue the affair. Upon meeting Anna at his home, she tells Stephen that she couldn't marry Martyn without being with him. They meet at the flat at an appointed time and begin another raucous tryst, but Martyn — having been guided to the flat by chance — finds them in bed together. Stunned, he falls over a stairway railing and plunges to his death. A devastated Stephen clutches Martyn's body while Anna silently leaves the scene.

Stephen's affair is exposed and becomes the subject of a media frenzy, with a mob of reporters convening outside his house. Inside, an anguished Ingrid reacts to the day's events by suggesting that Stephen should have killed himself over the affair and questioning whether he had ever been in love with her. It is strongly suggested that their marriage ends. Stephen, now publicly disgraced, is also forced to resign from his cabinet position. He meets Anna's mother at a hotel and finds that Anna is staying with her; they say nothing as they meet for the last time. Stephen withdraws from his old life and retires to an unknown location in Europe. In narration, he reveals that Anna now has a child with Peter. At Stephen's flat, a photo of Martyn, Anna, and Stephen — blown up to life size — hangs on his wall. He stares at Anna's frozen image, still gripped by his obsession for her.

Cast

Box office

The film was released on Christmas Day, 1992, and grossed $101,707 in 4 theaters in the opening weekend. It went on to gross $7,532,911 in the USA.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "Box office mojo".
  2. ^ "WalesOnline - RugbyNation - Scarlets - Ray Gravell: Man of the people". WalesOnline website. Media Wales Ltd. 2007-11-04. Retrieved 2009-06-01.