The Constant Gardener: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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A 2005 film, based on a book by [[John Le Carre]].
A 2005 film, based on a book by [[John Le Carre]].


This film is beautifully and artfully filmed, and plenty of the [[Camera Tricks]] are put in play at some point. But between the [[Flash Back]]s and Justin's [[Dream Sequence]]s/ hallucinations, it takes some thought to keep up with the narrative.
We open with Justin Quayle, a mild-mannered British diplomat, saying goodbye to his wife Tessa at an airfield. She is flying off with a colleague, Mr. Bluhm, and expects to be back in a few days. Cut to Justin meeting with his boss and taking care of the plants because he cannot help himself; he's told that Tessa may have been killed.


{{Needs More Info}}
Cut without warning to Justin and Tessa's first meeting. Justin is filling in for a higher-up diplomat, Sir Bernard Pellegrin, at the UN; Tessa uses the Q&A to go after him, the positions in the speech he read, and British foreign policy. When it is suggested that she be kicked out, Justin argues that her points are valid; she goes even further until she and Justin are the only people in the room. Justin secretly agrees with her, of course. They go out to dinner...

Cut to the present. Justin and his boss are in a morgue. A burned body lies under a sheet, and Justin is asked to ID it. It's Tessa; there is a [[Gory Discretion Shot]], but we do get to see Justin's boss, Sandy, vomit a little. Justin hangs back and remembers his life with her...

Flashbacks. When Justin was sent to Africa, Tessa wanted to go. We do not see how the scene she requests this ends because we know the answer because this is a flashback. Once in Africa, Tessa hooks up with an international medical agency and tries to push her positions to other people. She does not do diplomacy well. Justin has promised to protect her, but has also promised not to interfere with her work; when she gets into compromising-looking positions with her medical coworker, he has trouble keeping the promise and sinks deeper into gardening. She does a lot of computer-work, and severely objects to his insecticide at one point. But she tries to protect his innocence.

She gets pregnant. She refuses to stop working even when she's at risk of giving birth in a bad part of Kenya; when she does, the baby is stillborn. The clinic she is at tries to give her special treatment, but she cedes the bed to another woman. She wants to drive that woman's family home, because they're from a long way away and they walked; Justin says that there are too many and he wants her safe, and so he doesn't give them a ride. He will regret this later.

She demands that Sandy do something when she gives him a report. It gets kicked upstairs, and a personal letter got kicked back down. She asks to see the letter; because he's pressed for time, the boss agrees to this as long as she puts everything back and has sex with him when she gets back from the business trip she didn't come back from.

Finally, we see his farewell to her again.

When he comes home, he learns that her personal things have been rummaged through. Her computer, CDs, and many of her papers have been stolen. But they didn't find a hidden memory box, and Justin finds two empty giveaway medicine boxes--one with writing inside--for an experimental medicine. He also finds a letter from his boss which complains that she has something of his that he didn't agree to give her, but he's looking forward to sex... This shakes Justin.

A funeral is held for Tessa; she is to be buried in African soil. Justin forbids the natives from adding concrete because concrete is not soil. The son of the woman whom Tessa gave her bed to leaves a card (on another free medicine card), but doesn't want to talk to Justin.

Justin goes to find the woman. The clinic has no records of the woman at all. He meets her son at the medicine line and finds that the natives can get medical care only if they get the experimental drug. He is then arrested for looking.

Justin is now investigating things which Tessa was protecting him from, since he was a sweet, innocent, lovable diplomat. But he cannot let this go. His superiors try to stop him in various ways, using the official excuse that he's no longer mentally stable. And, in fact, he is no longer mentally stable. But people are still out to get him....

This film is beautifully and artfully filmed, and plenty of the [[Camera Tricks]] are put in play at some point. But between the [[Flash Back|Flash Backs]] and Justin's [[Dream Sequence|Dream Sequences]]/ hallucinations, it takes some thought to keep up with the narrative.

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{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
* [[Anachronic Order]]
* [[Anachronic Order]]

Revision as of 16:17, 28 July 2018

And we do mean any.

A 2005 film, based on a book by John Le Carre.

This film is beautifully and artfully filmed, and plenty of the Camera Tricks are put in play at some point. But between the Flash Backs and Justin's Dream Sequences/ hallucinations, it takes some thought to keep up with the narrative.

Tropes used in The Constant Gardener include:
  • Anachronic Order
  • The Atoner: Dr. Lorbeer. Justin as well
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Sir Bernard Pellegrin, Head of FCO Africa desk, and one of Justin's bosses. Quite apart from being one of the highest-ranking conspirators, the letter he wrote to Sandy (in response to Tessa's findings) reveals just how unpleasant he really is under his genteel exterior: in particular, he refers to Tessa as "your resident harlot."
  • Can't Stop the Signal
  • Chocolate Baby: teased - in fact Tessa is just nursing another woman's baby.
  • Cool Old Guy: Tim Donohue.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: The Three Bees management. as well as KDH
  • Cruel and Unusual Death: Arnold.
  • Dude Magnet: Tessa
  • Driven to Suicide: How the conspiracy plans to spin Justin's death
  • Enemy Mine: As a form of revenge against his ex-paymasters, Kenny Curtis supplies Justin with information- including the whereabouts of a mass grave containing the bodies of Wanza and several hundred other dead test subjects.
  • Enhance Button: A minor example.
  • Exact Eavesdropping: "a marriage of convenience that only produces dead children" - well, you can't blame him for misinterpreting that.
  • Government Conspiracy
  • How We Got Here
  • Inelegant Blubbering: Ham accuses himself of this, especially after Tessa's death.
  • Jerkass: Kenny Curtis, head of Three Bees; foul-mouthed, bad-tempered and totally corrupt. Actually has the nerve to call Tessa a bitch- after her death- right to Justin's face.
  • Law of Inverse Fertility
  • Media Scrum: After the letter is read at Justin's funeral.
  • Mistaken for Cheating: played for drama, and made ambiguous to the audience for a long time.
  • No Bisexuals: Justin is convinced that Arnold isn't having an affair with Tessa when he's told he has a boyfriend.
  • Oh, And Tessa Dies
  • Take Up My Sword: If only Justin could figure out what the sword was.
  • The Spymaster: Tim Donohue, though he freely admits that the spy game isn't what it used to be. Nonetheless, after Justin goes looking for answers, Tim remains one of his few allies.
  • Posthumous Character: Tessa, Arnold.
  • Unperson: Wanza and the rest who die under the effects of the experimental drug. Every record of their existence is erased.
  • Your Days Are Numbered: Tim points out that both he and Justin will both be dead by Christmas- Justin due to the hit put out on him, Tim due to cancer. Given that Justin's assassinated some time later and Tim's never seen again after this meeting, it seems he was right.