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Me Before You film review: a cheery sob fest that's super faithful to the book

Aleesha Matharu | Updated on: 3 June 2016, 17:21 IST

I knew exactly what to expect from Me Before You, having read Jojo Moyes's bestselling book the movie is adapted from a year ago, but I didn't expect for that adaptation to be as faithful to the written word as it was.

The resulting movie is a charming and efficacious drama that won't leave quite as broken as the book did (the last hundred pages or so had me in tears throughout). So despite not being as much of a tear-jerker, you'll definitely squeeze out a few drops. But also with a small smile and slight skip to your step.

Sappy fare for sure, but with lots of heart

Since the book falls under the chick lit genre, it's obviously a love story, but also one that's also about living - be it simply existing or truly living; and about bravery and the effort needed to redirect the path of a life once it's been pushed off course.

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In a small English town that houses an iconic castle, Louisa Clark (Emilia Clarke sans dragons and pale eyebrows), a 26-year-old working class girl lands a position as a "care assistant" to an intelligent, wealthy and very angry 31-year-old named Will Traynor (Sam Claflin from The Hunger Games).

When she meets Will, he's already spent the past two years as a quadriplegic after being hit by a motorbike. It's Will's mother, Camilla (Janet McTeer), who hires Louisa, and she does so out of desperation. She knows her son is miserable and is looking to end his life. She already employs a nurse to attend to his medical needs, but she hopes that somehow Louisa might boost his morale.

They make an odd pair; she's bubbly, energetic, and "too chatty". He's icy, bitter, and detached. Although he puts on a brave face in front of Louisa and his parents, he suffers from his lack of independence

But soon enough, bumbling and free spirited Louisa manages to inject a few moments of happiness in a life so crushed by the weight of what could have been.

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While Emilia Clarke's super-wiggly eyebrows dominate much of the movie, both her and Claflin managed to convey the complexity of both characters emotions realistically - a tough job since the camera is trained on their faces for most of the run time.

And under Thea Sharrock's direction, Clarke's Lou is as adorable, clumsy and endearing as her portrayal in the book, and Claflin's sarcasm provides a few necessary moments of comic relief.

Those Princess Leia buns and eclectic outfits Moyes wrote about in the book don't disappoint on screen either. In fact, the clothes left the theatre in giggles for the most of the first half before things got a bit more serious.

The rest of the cast is a who's who of popular British actors, including Brendon Coyle (Mr Bates of Downton Abbey) as Lou's out-of-work but genial dad; Charles Dance (Game of Thrones) as Will's father; and Matthew Lewis (Harry Potter's Neville Longbottom) as Lou's boyfriend Patrick, who prefers prepping for a triathlon to date night.

The verdict

The movie has already incited a few complaints about its portrayal of quadriplegics and its glossing over of the touchy subject of state-assisted suicide.

But it's a sugar-coated romantic comedy with everything you're looking for in a chick flick/chick lit and not a gritty documentary.

Are some of the story beats familiar? Yes. Is everything that happens totally realistic? Not necessarily. However, originality and reality aren't nearly as important when you got emotional authenticity. I mean, very few romance films these days care about whether their characters are believable, but at the end of Me Before You, Lou and Will felt like two real people that I got watch fall in love.

Also, it's real hard to fault a movie that sings the praises of subtitled entertainment.

RATING: 3 out of 5

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First published: 3 June 2016, 17:21 IST
 
Aleesha Matharu @almatharu

Born in Bihar, raised in Delhi and schooled in Dehradun, Aleesha writes on a range of subjects and worked at The Indian Express before joining Catch as a sub-editor. When not at work you can find her glued to the TV, trying to clear a backlog of shows, or reading her Kindle. Raised on a diet of rock 'n' roll, she's hit occasionally by wanderlust. After an eight-year stint at Welham Girls' School, Delhi University turned out to be an exercise in youthful rebellion before she finally trudged her way to J-school and got the best all-round student award. Now she takes each day as it comes, but isn't an eternal optimist.