While some may be astounded
at the considerably unanticipated conclusion, or question what direction
the film will take due to the constant shifting back and forth through
time, Atonement unquestionably provides a story few have seen before.
With piercing typewriter sounds blended into a strikingly catchy
score and superlative acting all around, this is a sweeping, epic
love story that is sure to receive Oscar attention in the coming
months. Tragedies as rich and fulfilling as this are seldom indeed.
Young Briony Tallis (Saoirse Ronan) feels matured beyond her
age of 13, and thinks only of adult tasks such as writing and
conducting her play, The Trials of Arabella. When she sees her
older sister Cecelia (Keira Knightley) being approached by Robbie
(James McAvoy), the housekeeper's son, whom she has a childish
crush on, she becomes jealous. That evening, visitor Lola Quincy
is attacked and raped by a friend of the family during a search
for her runaway brothers, and Briony names Robbie as the culprit.
Wrongfully accused, but with no witnesses to clear him, he is
sentenced to prison. Given the option to serve in the army rather
than to rot in prison, he is quickly swept up into the atrocities
of World War II. Meanwhile, Cecelia waits for him faithfully,
serving as a nurse, and as Briony grows up she realizes the anguish
she's put the two lovers through, and desperately seeks a way
to right her wrongs.
The most discommodious aspect of Atonement is the manner in which
time is lapsed and then backtracked, and mixed up in every method
possible. At points the film jumps forward by several years, slides
back a few months, repeats events from different character’s
perspectives, and meets back up with itself at others. There's
even a segment that plays in reverse and in slow motion. It is
an artistic concept, but seems to serve little purpose in a film
that focuses so heavily on character development and an unconventional
love story.