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The English Patient

The English Patient

  • Status: Released
  • 14-11-1996
  • Runtime: 162 min
  • Score: 7.161
  • Vote count: 2290

In the 1930s, Count Almásy is a Hungarian map maker employed by the Royal Geographical Society to chart the vast expanses of the Sahara Desert along with several other prominent explorers. As World War II unfolds, Almásy enters into a world of love, betrayal, and politics.

Ralph Fiennes

Almásy

Juliette Binoche

Hana

Willem Dafoe

David Caravaggio

Kristin Scott Thomas

Katharine Clifton

Naveen Andrews

Sikh Kip

Colin Firth

Geoffrey Clifton

Julian Wadham

Madox

Torri Higginson

Mary

Jürgen Prochnow

Major Muller

Kevin Whately

Sgt. Hardy

Clive Merrison

Fenelon-Barnes

Nino Castelnuovo

D'Agostino

Hichem Rostom

Fouad

Peter Rühring

Bermann

Geordie Johnson

Oliver

Liisa Repo-Martell

Jan

Raymond Coulthard

Rupert Douglas

Philip Whitchurch

Corporal Dade

Jason Done

Kiss Me Soldier

Roger Morlidge

Sergeant - Desert Train

Simon Sherlock

Private - Desert Train

Sebastian Schipper

Interrogation Room Soldier

Fritz Eggert

Interrogation Room Soldier

Sonia Mankaï

Arab Nurse

Rim Turkhi

Aicha

Sebastian Rudolph

Officer In Square

Thoraya Sehill

Interpreter In Square

Sondos Belhassen

Woman with Baby In Square

Gregor Truter

Corporal - El Taj

Salah Miled

Bedouin Doctor

Abdellatif Hamrouni

Ancient Arab

Samy Azaiez

Kamal

Habib Chetoui

Al Auf

Philippa Day

Officer's Wife

Amanda Walker

Lady Hampton

Paul Kant

Sir Ronald Hampton

Matthew Ferguson

Young Canadian Soldier

Anthony Smee

Beach Interrogation Officer

Lee Ross

Spalding

Dominic Mafham

Officer - El Taj

CinemaSerf

"Hana" (Juliette Binoche) volunteers to remain in war-torn Italy to look after her badly burnt patient. Who is he? Well nobody knows. All he recalls is that he came from England and that some time ago he was married. The arrival of the enigmatic Canadian "Caravaggio" (Willem Dafoe) starts to unravel the mystery as his suspicions as to the bedridden man's true identity, along with that man's gradually more lucid recollections take us back to a time when he first arrived in North Africa. He is "Count Almásy (Ralph Fiennes) who has come to draw maps. The onset of WWII interrupts his cartography, but "Caravaggio" suspects that he proceeded to assist the Nazi occupiers. Did he? It's also clear that he had a deeply intense relationship with "Katherine", (Kristen Scott Thomas), a married pillar of the local colonial society. Slowly, but surely, Anthony Minghella ensures that the threads start to come together - but tragedy seems to follow the Count wherever he goes, and it isn't long before we fill in the blanks that led him to his present, terminal state. Meantime, "Hana" is falling in love with "Kip" (Naveen Andrews), a bomb disposal expert who, with his squad, has taken up residence on their lawn. What really makes this stand out is the glorious cinematography. John Seale uses the light wonderfully on the Tunisian Sahara, at the eerily beautiful "Cave of Swimmers" and at the various Italian locations that add huge richness to this gently unfolding story. Fiennes and KST have a wonderful, understated, chemistry between them; Binoche adds real integrity and humanity to her role, and though Dafoe features quite sparingly, his crucial part in unravelling this human puzzle is played deftly. There is no denying that this is far too long, and the pacing of the film could do with some added juice now and again, but the assembly of talent on display here delivers a classy mix of romance and ambiguity in a stylish and creative fashion.