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Oscar and Lucinda

Oscar and Lucinda

  • Status: Released
  • 31-12-1997
  • Runtime: 132 min
  • Score: 6.353
  • Vote count: 77

After a childhood of abuse by his evangelistic father, misfit Oscar Hopkins becomes an Anglican minister and develops a divine obsession with gambling. Lucinda Leplastrier is a rich Australian heiress shopping in London for materials for her newly acquired glass factory back home. Deciding to travel to Australia as a missionary, Oscar meets Lucinda aboard ship, and a mutual obsession blossoms. They make a wager that will alter each of their destinies.

Ralph Fiennes

Oscar Hopkins

Cate Blanchett

Lucinda Leplastrier

Ciarán Hinds

Reverend Dennis Hasset

Tom Wilkinson

Hugh Stratton

Richard Roxburgh

Mr. Jeffries

Christian Manon

Mr. Tomasetti

Clive Russell

Theophilus

Barnaby Kay

Wardley-Fish

Linda Bassett

Betty Stratton

Geoffrey Rush

Narrator (voice)

Basil Clarke

Elderly Parishoner

Andrea Moor

Miss Shaddock

Bille Brown

Percy Smith

Josephine Byrnes

Miriam Chadwick

Barry Otto

Jimmy D'Abbs

Polly Cheshire

Young Lucinda

Gillian Jones

Elizabeth Leplastrier

Robert Menzies

Abel Leplastrier

Adam Hayes

Young Oscar

Matyelok Gibbs

Mrs. Williams

Sonia Ritter

Fanny Drabble

Will Barton

College Student

Jonathan Markwood

College Student

Nicholas Tennant

College Student

Sam Newman

George Loxwood

Nicholas Fordham

College Student

Peter Whitford

Mr. Ahearn

Lynette Curran

Mrs. Ahearn

Ron Blanchard

Steamer Captain

Colin Taylor

Frazer

Michelle Doake

Hotel Maid

Karen Vickery

Society Gossip

Elspeth MacTavish

Society Gossip

Leverne McDonnell

Miss Malcolm

Geoff Morrell

Charley Fig

Douglas Hedge

Dog Pit Caller

Tobias Saunders

Belgian Boy

Marianne Borgo

Belgian Grandmother

Vanessa Seydoux

Belgian Mother

Leslie Dayman

Glassworks Foreman

CinemaSerf

This is a wonderfully good looking film with two strong performances from Ralph Fiennes ("Hopkins") and Cate Blanchett ("Lucinda"). The former is a bit of a loner being raised by his rather puritanical Pentecostal father. He absconds into the care of Anglican "Stratton" (Tom Wilkinson) who arranges for him to obtain an university education. Thing is, this brightly red haired lad doesn't really fit in, and is soon far more focussed on his rather effective system of gambling. Meantime, the latter, an Australian, has inherited a substantial fortune and invested it in a glass making factory (glass still being a bit of a luxury in 1850s Australia). When the two meet on a boat they realise that their isolation from society at large (and their fondness for a turn at the cards) gives them plenty in common and their relationship burgeons. When the two come up with a fairly outrageous wager between them - that they can build a church entirely of glass and ship it up-country to the remote town inhabited by preacher "Hassett" (Ciarán Hinds) the adventure elements hot up a little. The problem for me here, is that though the film looks lovely - and plenty of attention to detail has been payed to the costumes and general aesthetic, the story is really pretty weak. It tries to tackle issues of lonesomeness, religious bigotry and of the somewhat un-emancipated role of women in both Britain and Australia at the time, but somehow the thing never quite catches fire. It is paced very gently, and there are just too many characters to try to keep track of - the focus meanders a little too much, and the ending didn't make too much sense to me. I did quite enjoy watching it, and Blanchett is on good form - but I don't know that I would bother again.