
SEVEN YEARS IN TIBET(PG-13).
Director: Jean-Jacques Annaud
Stars:Brad
Pitt, David Thewlis, B D Wong, Mako,
Danny Denzongpa, Jamyang Jamtsho
Wangchik, Lhakpa Tsamchoe, Jetsun
Pema, Victor Wong
Running Time:136 minutes.
The film begins in 1939, when Austrian mountaineer
Heinrich Harrer (Brad Pitt) set out on an expedition
to climb Nanga Parbat, an inaccessible peak in the
Himalayas. The expedition was a failure, and when
war broke out, Harrer and his fellow climbers were
imprisoned in a British POW camp in India. After
many unsuccessful attempts, Harrer and his friend
Peter Aufschnaiter (David Thewlis, from Naked, etc)
managed to escape from the camp and made their
way overland to Tibet, a peaceful and deeply religious
country normally off limits to foreigners. Somehow,
Harrer and Aufschnaiter found refuge in this isolated
country at the roof of the world, where they remained
for seven years as privileged guests.
Harrer became a tutor and advisor and friend to the
curious young Dalai Lama and underwent a major
philosophical rethink. His once arrogant, narcissistic
and self-centred nature softened into someone more
understanding and compassionate, with a deeper
understanding of the world around him. Pitt
overcomes any initial misgivings about being cast in
such a complex role, and he delivers a credible and
quite powerful performance as a man who undergoes
an enormous transformation in arguably his most
ambitious role to date. In many of his recent films
Pitt has been trying to shake off his light weight
image by choosing to work with directors and actors
in material that challenges him and enables him to
reinvent himself as a credible actor of some depth and
emotional range.
Jamyang Jamtsho Wangchuk is appealing as the
teenage Dalai Lama, full of curiosity about the world
and eager to learn, and delivers a wonderfully natural
performance. In an astute piece of casting, Jetsun
Pema, the Dalai Lama's real-life sister, plays his
mother here.
The authenticity, meticulous attention to detail, and a
stunning visual style that are all hallmarks of
Annaud's films, are present in Seven Years In Tibet.
Annaud and his technical crew have superbly
recreated Lhasa, the capital city, and the Dalai Lama's
magnificent palace, and also the colourful costumes.
They also bring an atmosphere of dignity and
understanding to their recreation of the ostentatious
religious ceremonies and rituals that are part of the
daily life of Tibet. When political pressure from China
prohibited Annaud from actually filming in Tibet or
neighbouring areas of India, Chile and Argentina
actually doubled for the Himalayas. Veteran
cinematographer Robert Fraisse superbly captures
the harsh beauty of the mountainous regions and
gives the film a gorgeous surface quality.
The screenplay from Becky Johnson (The Prince Of
Tides, etc) is even-handed in its treatment of Harrer,
and, although it doesn't gloss over the fact that he was
a member of the nazi party, the fact that he was a
member of the SS is not mentioned. In fact, the
Chinese authorities still point to Harrer's Nazi
connections whenever they want to discredit the
peace loving Dalai Lama and his followers. However,
the film creates a more sympathetic portrait of Harrer,
who, it is suggested, merely followed the prevailing
political mood of the time in order to be allowed the
freedom to pursue his own passion for climbing
mountains. Johnson even includes a romantic subplot
in which both Harrer and Aufschnaiter vie for the
affections of Pema (Lhakpa Tsamchoe), a beautiful
tailor who designs new clothes for them during their
stay.
The title is a little misleading, though, as the film
actually spans more than a decade, covering the
period from the 1940's up to the Chinese invasion of
Tibet and the expulsion of the Dalai Lama, who now
lives in permanent exile. Annaud treats his potentially
controversial subject matter with due gravity, and it
will be interesting to see how Martin Scorsese
approaches similar material in his forthcoming biopic
of the Dalai Lama.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission