The Remains Of The Day movie review (1993) | Roger Ebert (2024)

In 1958, an old man in a big old car begins a journey across England to the sea. His name is Stevens, and for many years he has been the head butler at Darlington Hall, a famous country house. He is going to visit a woman he has not seen in a long time: Miss Kenton, who was once the housekeeper at Darlington. He thinks perhaps she can be persuaded to resume her old position under the hall's new owner, a retired American congressman.

Both Stevens and Darlington Hall are anacronisms. Stevens comes from a tradition of personal service; his goal in life is to serve his employer to the best of his ability, and as we get to know him, we realize that this was his only goal: He allowed it to blind him to all of the other promises of life.

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"The Remains of the Day" tells the story of Stevens' trip to the sea, and what he finds there. Along the way, in flashback, we see his memories of the great days at the hall, when Lord Darlington played host to the world's leaders, and it seemed at times the future of Britain was being decided. And slowly we begin to realize that things were not as they seemed, that Darlington was not as wise as he thought, that Stevens was blind to the reality around him.

"The Remains of the Day" is based on the Booker Prize novel by Kazuo Ishiguro, which I would have thought almost unfilmable, until I saw this film. So much of it takes place within Stevens' mind, and it is up to the reader to interpret what the butler remembers: To deduce reality through the filter of a narrow, single-minded man. The reality is that Lord Darlington, in the years before World War II, had great sympathy for Germany, and hoped to bring about a separate peace between Britain and the Nazis. In this he was not precisely evil; he was deluded, short-sighted, easily persuaded by the pieties of genteel racism. He was, as a dinner guest brutally informs him, an amateur, who should have left international relations to the professionals.

The movie has been made by the team of director James Ivory, producer Ismail Merchant, and writer Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. After "A Room with a View" and "Howards End," they are at the height of their powers, taking us inside a society where tradition is valued, even at the cost of repressing normal human feelings. The feelings, for example, that Stevens (Anthony Hopkins) might be expected to feel for Miss Kenton (Emma Thompson).

In a British country house of the period, the head butler and the housekeeper would have been equals, roughly speaking, each supervising the two major realms of service. Miss Kenton is clearly attracted to the butler, but he is terrified of intimacy, and sidesteps it through a fanatic devotion to his work. The film demonstrates this in a series of quiet, almost secretive scenes, in which she pushes, and he flees. The most painful, and brilliant, shows Miss Kenton surprising Stevens in his room, reading a book.

What book? she asks. He hides the cover. She pursues him, cornering him, snatching the book away to find it is a best-selling romance.

She had not imagined he read romances! He only reads, he stiffly explains, to improve his vocabulary.

Does Stevens possess any ordinary human feelings? Quite possibly, but something has led him to bury them. We meet his father (Peter Vaughan), himself a butler, who reared the son to a rigid idea of service - so rigid that when the father is actually dying upstairs, Stevens does not abandon his post at an important dinner party.

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The motor journey unfolds, as incident and memory reveal one secret after another. We begin to understand the nature of Darlington's behavior. The lord (played by that most urbane and civilized actor James Fox) is not a worldly man (he even recruits Stevens to explain "about the birds the the bees" to a godson who is obviously far beyond a zoological approach to sex). Cultivated and flattered by Nazi sympathizers and anti-Semites, he sponsors "international conferences" that will eventually lead to Darlington Hall being described as a traitor's nest. Does Stevens hear what is discussed at the meetings where he serves? What does he think about it? It is not the butler's place, he explains, to listen to his employer's conversations, or form opinions of them.

As the political disaster of Darlington Hall unfolds, a personal disaster also is in the making. Miss Kenton, discouraged in her approaches to Stevens, eventually bolts from her job. And it is only many years later that she contacts Stevens again, by letter, leading to his motor trip. Perhaps at some place buried deep in the darkness of his hopes, there is the thought that she might . . .still be interested in him? The closing scenes paint a quiet heartbreak. The whole movie is quiet, introspective, thoughtful: A warning to those who put their emotional lives on hold, because they feel their duties are more important. Stevens has essentially thrown away his life in the name of duty. He has used his "responsibilities" as an excuse for avoiding his responsibility to his own happiness.

"The Remains of the Day" is a subtle, thoughtful movie.There are emotional upheavals in it, but they take place in shadows and corners, in secret. It tells a very sad story - three stories, really. Not long ago I praised a somewhat similar film, Martin Scorsese's "The Age of Innocence," also about characters who place duty and position above the needs of the heart. I got some letters from readers who complained the movie was boring, that "nothing happens in it." To which I was tempted to reply: If you had understood what happened in it, it would not have been boring.

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Film Credits

The Remains Of The Day movie review (1993) | Roger Ebert (2)

The Remains Of The Day (1993)

Rated PG

134 minutes

Cast

Anthony Hopkinsas Stevens

Emma Thompsonas Miss Kenton

James Foxas Lord Darlington

Christopher Reeveas Mr. Lewis

Peter Vaughanas Stevens' Father

Directed by

  • James Ivory

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The Remains Of The Day movie review (1993) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What was the point of the movie Remains of the Day? ›

A movie governed by twin regrets, The Remains of the Day stars Anthony Hopkins as an aging butler at a faded British estate who quietly bemoans two things from decades earlier: his failure to open his heart to a former housekeeper (Emma Thompson) and his willful ignorance toward his onetime employer's Nazi sympathies.

Is The Remains of the Day a good movie? ›

Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's adaptation of the novel is exceptional and James Ivory's direction has rarely been better or more focused. With all this said, it is Hopkins and Thompson that dominate the action and make "The Remains of the Day" one of the best films of the 1990s. 5 stars out of 5.

Were Siskel and Ebert friends? ›

After Siskel's death, Ebert reminisced about their close relationship saying: Gene Siskel and I were like tuning forks, Strike one, and the other would pick up the same frequency. When we were in a group together, we were always intensely aware of one another.

What happened to Gene Siskel? ›

Siskel died at a hospital in Evanston, Illinois, on February 20, 1999, nine months after his diagnosis and surgery; he was 53 years old. His funeral was held two days later at the North Suburban Synagogue Beth El. He is interred at Westlawn Cemetery in Norridge, Illinois.

Was Mr. Stevens in love with Miss Kenton? ›

The final section of The Remains of the Day is incredibly sad, as Stevens never tells Miss Kenton that he loves her because he feels that it is too late. Listening to her talk about her husband and her daughter has made him realize how much time has passed, and how much opportunity lost.

What is the main message of The Remains of the Day? ›

As Salman Rushdie comments, The Remains of the Day is "a story both beautiful and cruel." It is a story primarily about regret: throughout his life, Stevens puts his absolute trust and devotion in a man who makes drastic mistakes.

Is Remains of the Day based on a true story? ›

The Remains of the Day (1989) is not based on a true story despite including real-world events. The novel is, therefore, historical fiction.

What happens at the end of The Remains of the Day? ›

Oh, well Stevens and Miss Kenton end up admitting their love for one another and living happily ever after. Then they move to Tahiti.

Why is it called The Remains of the Day? ›

As well, "remains" is another word for a dead body, which connects with the death of Stevens's employer Lord Darlington. The "day" in the title represents life in general. The entire title's meaning is meant to convey how Stevens must live the rest of his life without wasting time dreaming of the past.

How old was Ebert when he died? ›

On April 4, 2013, one of America's best-known and most influential movie critics, Roger Ebert, who reviewed movies for the Chicago Sun-Times for 46 years and on TV for 31 years, dies at age 70 after battling cancer.

Why were Siskel and Ebert so popular? ›

Their critical criteria--they both put a great emphasis on likability of characters--influenced many mainstream reviewers, as did their show's format (they spawned a host of imitators). Siskel and Ebert became late-night talk show mainstays and frequent targets of parodies like In Living Color's cheeky ``Men on Film.''

Who did Roger Ebert marry? ›

Chaz Ebert (born Charlie Hammel; October 15, 1952) is an American businesswoman. She is best known as the wife and widow of film critic Roger Ebert, having been married to him from 1992 until his death in 2013.

What happened to Roger Ebert's jaw? ›

In the early 2000s, Ebert was diagnosed with cancer of the thyroid and salivary glands. He required treatment that included removing a section of his lower jaw in 2006, leaving him severely disfigured and unable to speak or eat normally.

How long were Siskel and Ebert together? ›

That's become the default name everyone uses when talking about the influential movie review show that aired on public television and in syndication from 1975 to 1999. But the reality is that “Siskel & Ebert” was technically only titled Siskel & Ebert for the second half of its run on television.

Why did Siskel have brain surgery? ›

Siskel was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor on May 8, 1998. He underwent brain surgery three days later. For a few weeks after the surgery he did the Siskel & Ebert show on the telephone (from his hospital bed) while Ebert was in the studio.

What is the story behind The Remains of the Day? ›

The novel describes Stevens' road trip through the English countryside to visit a former colleague. The trip prompts him to reflect on his past professional and private life, when the nobleman he served got caught up in the political turmoil before World War II.

What does The Remains of the Day teach? ›

'The Remains of the Day is a book about a thwarted life. It's about how class conditioning can turn you into your own worst enemy, making you complicit in your own subservience.

What was the meaning of the pigeon at the end of Remains of the Day? ›

In the film, the symbolism of the pigeon flying free while Stevens remains trapped in his prison at Darlington Hall represents Stevens's regret at living a life that was never his.

What is the tragedy in The Remains of the Day? ›

His tragedy is that his pursuit of greatness as a butler subsumes everything: his emotions, his critical faculties and his judgement. Stevens' restraint also wrecks his chance of finding happiness and love with Miss Kenton. He cannot admit his feelings for her and thus his, in part, is a tragedy of love.

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