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Atonement

Atonement

  • Status: Released
  • 27-02-2007
  • Runtime: 123 min
  • Score: 7.638
  • Vote count: 4526

As a 13-year-old, fledgling writer Briony Tallis irrevocably changes the course of several lives when she accuses her older sister's lover of a crime he did not commit.

James McAvoy

Robbie Turner

Keira Knightley

Cecilia Tallis

Saoirse Ronan

Briony Tallis (Age 13)

Romola Garai

Briony Tallis (Age 18)

Vanessa Redgrave

Briony Tallis (Age 77)

Brenda Blethyn

Grace Turner

Juno Temple

Lola Quincey

Benedict Cumberbatch

Paul Marshall

Harriet Walter

Emily Tallis

Alfie Allen

Danny Hardman

Jérémie Renier

Luc Cornet

Anthony Minghella

Interviewer

Tobias Menzies

Naval Officer

Peter Wight

Police Inspector

Gina McKee

Sister Drummond

Tilly Vosburgh

Mother of Evacuees

John Normington

Vicar

Patrick Kennedy

Leon Tallis

Peter McNeil O'Connor

Police Sergeant

Daniel Mays

Tommy Nettle

Nonso Anozie

Frank Mace

Michelle Duncan

Fiona Maguire

Michel Vuillermoz

Frenchman

Lionel Abelanski

Frenchman

Roger Evans

Beach Soldier

Bronson Webb

Beach Soldier

Ian Bonar

Beach Soldier

Jamie Beamish

Soldier in Bray Bar

Johnny Harris

Soldier in Bray Bar

Billy Seymour

Soldier in Bray Bar

Neil Maskell

Soldier in Bray Bar

Nick Bagnall

Soldier in Bray Bar

Vivienne Gibbs

Staff Nurse

Alice Orr-Ewing

Probationary Nurse

Olivia Grant

Probationary Nurse

Katy Lawrence

Probationary Nurse

Paul Stocker

Crying Soldier

Alex Noodle

Solitary Sunbather

Kelly Scott

Hospital Admin Assistant

Ryan Kiggell

Registrar

Wendy Nottingham

Mrs. Jarvis

Julia West

Betty

Felix von Simson

Pierrot Quincey

Charlie von Simson

Jackson Quincey

Leander Deeny

Police Constable

Mark Holgate

Soldier at Hospital Entrance

Romola Garai

Briony, 18

Elliott Francis

Soldier (uncredited)

Craig Douglas

Soldier (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

"Cecilia" (Keira Knightley) has fallen for "Robbie" (James McCoy) - a man well down the social ladder from her family and their stately home. It's love, though, and the young man is doing his best to fit into their privileged world by studying (at their expense) at Cambridge with a view to becoming a doctor. Meantime, following a scene that she has completely misinterpreted and the reading of a letter that wasn't any of her business, their behaviour is being rather unhealthily scrutinised by her thirteen year old sister "Briony" (Saoirse Ronan) who soon becomes fixated on the couple, on destroying the couple and to that latter end she concocts a story that not only achieves her goal, but sees "Robbie" wrongly incarcerated for a fairly heinous crime. The war intervenes and that gives the lovers a chance to recalibrate their feelings for each other whilst the now more mature "Briony" (now Romola Garai) with whom her sister has become estranged, is having a serious crisis of conscience and travels to London to be both a nurse and to take responsibility for her behaviour five years earlier. This is a complex and detailed piece of cinema and McAvoy delivers really well as the honest and decent lad caught up in a web of deceit and envy. Knightley is less effective - but still contributes well enough as the truth is finally known before an inevitable tragedy strikes. It's a story about the ramifications of a lie, but it's also about people's abilities to love, forgive and to judge. Loyalty might only be skin deep but regret lasts for ever, and ever might not be so long as you might hope. Dario Marianelli has created a masterful score to accompany this story and the writing and Joe Wright's subtle direction ensure we steer well clear of the melodramatic and the sentimental as the denouement looms and Vanessa Redgrave appears for a quite fitting final mea culpa. A straightforward British period drama this isn't and it's well worth a watch on big screen for the a cinematography that marries the rustic charm of rural England with the horrors of bombs, bullets and blood poignantly.