10 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- A great subtle movie with a great little message that everyone takes for granted, 18 May 2004
Author:
nagarpoe from Irvine, California
The main character in Metroland embodies the crisis that every one of
us has already or will probably go through. "Have we made the right
choices in our lives to make ourselves happy?".
The movie portrays this character's search for the answers through
flashbacks to his past as well as new events that are occurring in his
present. The two paths that he could have taken were shown. He begins
questioning if he had made the right choice with his current life. A
life which he thought he would never want when he was younger and
rebellious. The "9 to 5" job that we, or at least some of us, have all
dreaded in fear of the death of our own creativity and individualism.
The main male character basically is the imperfect hero with imperfect
thoughts, much akin to the "hero" that we can hope to be at this day
and age.
The last line in the movie, "If not now, then, never." is a line we
always hear but take its meaning for granted. Truly, if happiness is
not found in the moment..in the "now"..then, where else can it ever be?
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- Strangers in the night, 17 April 2000
Author:
MuteMae
It's 1977 and Chris is a 30ish bloke who still has the eager, wistful face
of an angelic adolescent, enjoys a placid existence in the London suburbs,
taking comforting in his wife, his baby, and his garden.
Yet he's a haunted man. Spurred by the arrival of Toni, his rakish
counterculture chum, he is tormented by visions of what might have been -
the enticing word of sexual possibility he left behind, embodied in memories
of his blissed out love affair with a sultry secretary during his bohemian
Paris days in the late '60s.
As the film glides back and forth between eras, the churning of Chris'
heart comes to the force with with disarming intimacy. We feel as if we're
seeing the formation of an individual: his all too brief fling with
hedonism, the sadness and hidden wisdom of a path that seems to have choosen
him rather than the other way around.
"Metroland" is a no-fuss movie that casts a rich, tranquil spell. It's a
rare portrait of a happy marriage that is honest about the complex currents
of desire, and the drama is beautifully played by Bale who gawks with
soulful sweetness, and Emily Watson does her most piercing work since
"Breaking the waves."
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Take the train, 2 May 1999
Author:
Brian Orndorf from Phoenix
"Metroland"
Christian Bale stars as Chris, a 30 year old man who must reexamine his
priorities and
life choices once an old friend(Lee Ross) comes back into his life. The
friend criticizes
Chris on the lack of excitement in his life and urges him to leave his
wife
Marion (Emily
Watson) and travel the world. As enticing the dramatic possibilities seem
with this plot,
"Metroland" takes all the expectations one might have and tries something
new. It's a
character piece, headlined with a smashing performance by Bale. It's also
funny, bright,
and deeply introspective.
The plot takes us on a tour of Chris's past. A past that included a stay
in
Paris with a
beautiful native. The woman teaches Chris the ways of love and bohemian
lifestyle, a
lifestyle Chris has always wanted. The section takes up about half of the
film, and is the
film's strongest suit. We see the very English Chris try to pass himself
off
as a Parisian
and curse at other Brits, he also loses his virginity is a grandly comical
scene. The other
half of the film deals with Chris trying to justify his lack of shame in
his
calm,
predictable life. Veteran director Philip Saville does a good job making
sure the audience
never loses faith in Chris. It could have been real easy to drag the film
through a series of
lame dramatics, but Saville gives realistic answers to realistic
questions.
There are a lot of pluses in "Metroland". It's well written, sharply shot
with a good eye for
detail, and everybody out there knows how I feel about the brilliant Emily
Watson. What
I liked best, and this might seem weird, but with all the grotesque nudity
in such films as
"Go" and "He Got Game", "Metroland" is refreshingly blunt. There is a lot
of
bodies on
display here, but in a very natural and - dare I say - beautiful way. It's
not thrown in your
face. It just is. This is a good movie that relies on a soft, steady
narrative than a hyped,
antsy one.------------- 8
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A man questions his life's direction when an old friend comes for a visit., 10 April 1999
Author:
FISK-2 from Jersey City, NJ
If Francois Truffaut were still alive today I think Metroland would easily
fit into his oeuvre. A film about a person taking stock of himself at the
crossroads, Metroland introduces us to a suburban utopia where people go
to
work everyday, take their kids to school, and wash their cars on the
weekend. Christian Bale seems to accept this life until an old friend
rings
him up wanting to revisit the old times. Throughout the film we see what
Bale's character could've been and how much happier he thought he was.
Metroland's assertion is to accept life for what it is and not what it is
not. Not everyone's cup of tea as evidenced by Bale's boyhood chum but
being
the film's setting takes place during the late seventies in England right
before the rise of Thatcherism may be a subtle stab at what the middle
class
of the film will come to accept. Conformity over confrontation may
ultimately be Metroland's theme no matter how much it hurts us to admit
it.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Nostalgia for the ex-swinging bachelor, 19 May 2000
Author:
Raymond Tan from Singapore
If you're a guy who had lots of fun in the past, but married now and in your
thirties then it's easy to identify with this movie. Christian Bale plays
Chris Lloyd, a family man tempted to go back to his devil-may-care bachelor
days of the 60s. The temptation comes in the visit of old school chum,
played by Lee Ross, who epitomizes everything that life should have turned
out for Chris. Emily Watson plays the stabilizing force as Chris' wife who
tries to keep him on the straight and narrow path. The movie brought back
lots of nostalgia to me, especially my teenage days in the 80s. Everything
is very British and the accent takes getting used to, but this is an
entertaining story, based on a 1980 novel by Julian Barnes. My only gripe is
that the color prints of the film were really bad, making it look dull and
lifeless. I know the setting is 1977 but the whole production was
disappointing.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Grooving in Metroland, 25 July 2007
Author:
reel_emotion from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Based on the novel by Julian Barnes and directed by Philip Saville
(Masterpiece Theatre's The Buccaneers, The Life and Loves of a
She-Devil miniseries), Metroland is a charming little British movie.
It's a character study of Chris, played by Christian Bale (American
Psycho, Batman Begins, Rescue Dawn), in an early role that is a nice
change of pace for him. Bale captures this sweet, geeky, funny
every-man character brilliantly.
In 1977, now a married man with a baby girl, Chris lives in the suburb
of Metroland, his hometown, where he vowed as a teenager that he would
leave and never return. Every working day he takes the mass transit
rail out of the suburb to London to his job at an advertising agency.
He wanted to be a globe-trotting photographer, but settled for this.
Chris seems content with his life, but when his ne'er-do-well chum
Toni, played by Lee Ross (Secrets and Lies), shows up, Chris has a
midlife crisis, albeit a young midlife crisis. Toni's appearance brings
back the memories of his carefree life before marriage and
responsibility: during the 1960s, when he lives in Paris, takes
photographs, and has his first serious girlfriend, Annick (Elsa
Zylberstein). Bale plays a naive, love sick man to Annick's worldly,
sexy French woman. They start an intense sexual affair, and Chris is
quite smitten with Annick until he meets Marionall decked out in go-go
boots, liquid eyeliner, and a That-Girl hair flip. Chris is attracted
to Marion mainly because she can see through some of his foolishness.
In one conversation between the tworeminiscent of It's a Wonderful
Life, in which James Stewart informs Donna Reed that he doesn't want to
marry or have kids, but then gleefully gives in, kissing Reed, Chris
tells Marion that he wants to stay on in Paris and doesn't want to get
married and have children. Marion cruelly replies, "You're not original
enough to." Chris reconsiders his relationship with Annick, who he has
nothing in common withonly lust. And he chooses Marion.
In one of many funny scenes, Chris is in bed with his wife, Marion,
played by Emily Watson (Breaking the Waves, Hilary and Jackie, The
Water Horse: Legend of the Deep). He starts kissing her sweetly, but
she is too tired for that. He says to her, "I can't remember the last
time." "Yesterday morning," she replies. Then he says, "Yeah, we used
to do it three times a day." She says, "It only happened once, and you
complained about being sore a week afterwards." He smiles and replies,
"Sore, but very smug." This changes Marion's mind, but they are soon
interrupted by their daughter's cry--such is the life of a family man.
During Toni's visit, Marion makes her dislike for him clear to Chris
who defends his lifelong friend. Toni is bound and determined to lead
Chris astray, so that Toni can prove to himself that he made the right
decision not to settle down. Toni plays his part well as the devil on
Chris' shoulder. At his party, Tony convinces one of his free minded
girlfriends to give Chris a shag. Just as Chris is considering
consummation, he imagines Marion being carried away in an ambulance.
When Toni happens to pass by the room, Chris realizes that Toni put her
up to itand is insulted and leaves. It shows how even the closest,
longest friendships can die in adulthood when people choose to go down
different paths. Later Chris suspects something happened between Marion
and Toni, and he gets into fisticuffs with Toni. Marion tells Chris
that he made a pass at her; she was somewhat tempted, but refused. As
Toni gets ready to leave town, Chris and he make up somewhat
half-heartedly.
While taking a bath together, Chris tells Marion about the girl at
Toni's party who he nearly slept with, and, of course, Marion has an
ongoing joke of telling Chris to go ahead and have an affair. Marion
then reveals to Chris she had a one night stand long ago and tells him
that it won't happen again. We don't know if this is true, or if Marion
is only trying to spice things upbecause as a result of her
confession, they have passionate sex. And afterwards she kids him about
having sex with the girl at the party.
Christian Bale's mutton chops and flared collars and pants legs give
the movie a real retro feel. Bale has some great comedic moments here.
In one of two very good scenes, Toni takes Chris to a punk rock
concert, but Chris hates punk and only tolerates it by getting drunk
and stoned. Chris comes home quite randy and keeps trying to pull
Marion down on the bed in his inebriated state. The other scene is
Chris' first date with Annick in which he conspicuously kisses herand
pulls her into bed awkwardly.
The female characters teeter on being stereotypical. Annick and Marion
are the archetype of the all-knowing, all-beautiful, all-witty woman to
the archetype of Chris as the bumbling, sex obsessed male. Emily
Watson's performance elevates Marion's character, so she doesn't turn
into a shrewwe can sympathize with her as Chris shuts her out as he
daydreams about his glory days of youth. We also feel sympathy towards
Annick as she goes from being the experienced one in the relationship
to being the needy and jealous one as Chris matures.
I describe Metroland as a British cozy romantic dramedyif such a thing
exists. Some memorable scenes and some funny moments make the film
worthwhile. As does the good acting between Bale and Watson, who make
it more than a forgettable flick. Bale and Watson have good chemistry
and repeat that again in the 2002 Sci-Fi cult classic, Equilibrium.
Metroland is a movie you rarely see now: a movie that deals
intelligently and realistically with themes of adulthood.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Witty, thoughtful and funny..., 25 June 2006
Author:
minkmocha from United States
I agree with all the posts about what this movie was about -- a man
evaluating his present life. But what made this film so good to me was
the fantastic acting by Christian Bale and Emily Watson who portrayed
their characters so authentically. As a 30 yo single woman myself, the
relationships portrayed in this movie came off in a genuine way. What
it's like to be married for nearly 10 years and how to preserve the
love in the relationship and yet deal w/ the tensions and problems from
it. All of this was portrayed subtly, sensitively, and with humour at
many times throughout this movie in a natural and unforced way. I
credit this to Christian Bale and Emily Watson's acting abilities and
the Director's talent. To me, underlying the mid-life crisis of one man
in this movie is the theme of "relationship" and how he gets his life
from them. Whether it's with his wife, girlfriend or best friend from
childhood. I really thought everything about this moview was excellent:
script, acting, directing, scenes. More than that, it captured the
subtle nuances and emotions shared between people which wasn't stated
in words but one "felt" as a viewer that one knew what that look meant
or the silent treatment was for. It's now my favorite top 10 movies in
my book.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Second half saves some unnecessary characters, 24 December 2005
Author:
J Biz from United States
Metroland is true to the midlife crisis, except between two people who
haven't quite reached that stage of their lives yet. Christian Bale
plays an Englishman who begins to reminisce about his past in the mid
and late '60s when an old friend (played by Lee Ross) comes back to
stir up his life. While I felt that the story was strong and seemingly
dramatic enough to keep me interested and entertained, the character
played by Lee Ross just seemed unnecessary. This character is supposed
to build the plot the first half of the movie and I felt this could've
been reached in many other directions.
And if you love France, well, you'll love the beautiful depiction of
French women with an excellent performance given by Elsa Zylberstein,
Bale's character's 'old flame' that he thinks about constantly
throughout the film.
Beautiful 'still' cinematography throughout is perfect for Bale's
character's love for photography and makes the film very watchable just
for art's sake.
By the time I reached the last 45 minutes or so, I was much more
intrigued and worried for the well-being of Bale's marriage with his
present day (1977) wife, played wonderfully by Emily Watson. The
tension between the two of them throughout the film is far more than
believable and I loved it.
While I wanted to give this movie a much higher rating, I think it is
fair to say that the first half moves much too slow. I was also
slightly disappointed by the ending of the film, but it was still a
great surprise and hit me unexpectedly. I highly recommend for
Bale/Watson fans.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Metroland...a state of mind, not a place., 25 June 2000
Author:
Alex (stingaree1) from Texas
After several years of a happy marriage an old friend from his single years
re-appears. The movie then lets us see in flashbacks how the main characters
have evolved into an urban "long time married couple." The friend's return
creates great tension between the husband and wife and leads the husband to
a re-examination of his life. The characters play off each other very well
and the actress that plays the French girlfriend was terrific. The best line
in the movie was, "Oh, you'll get married and have a family, your not
original enough not to." This film tells its story, develops the characters,
and by the time it ends has tied everything up in nice packages leaving the
viewer satisfied.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Baby Boomers Attractively Wallowing in Regrets and Good Music, 19 December 2005
Author:
noralee from Queens, NY
"Metroland" should appeal to boomers, particularly ones who now find
themselves in the suburbs and/or with families. (It did not appeal to
the two senior citizen couples next to and in back of me who did not
shut up throughout the whole movie as they didn't seem to grasp the
concepts of flashbacks or fantasy images)
I'm sure there's other movies that have a friend and/or sibling
interfering in a stable relationship and shaking the tree (my friend
thought of "Hilary and Jackie"-- but maybe because both have Emily
Watson, here bundled up in sweaters to try and make her less ravishing)
but I couldn't think of one that deals with our time period of
post-'60's measurements of personal happiness and fulfillment. We could
relate to the English and Parisian experiences with parallel ones here
from the same time periods of '68 vs. '78 (nicely accurate hair styles,
make-up and clothes).
While there are no shortage of shots of gorgeous naked women, there's
ironic visual comment regardless the lead character's lovemaking
techniques don't improve over the decade of experience. One sees plenty
of Christian Bale, such that I think it would, I imagine, appeal to gay
men as well.
Nice use of punk music (freaking out the senior next to me!), otherwise
the score was quite lovely by Mark Knopfler, with a closing song
original to the movie, with apropos lyrics.
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Metroland (1997)
10 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

A great subtle movie with a great little message that everyone takes for granted, 18 May 2004
Author: nagarpoe from Irvine, California
The main character in Metroland embodies the crisis that every one of us has already or will probably go through. "Have we made the right choices in our lives to make ourselves happy?".
The movie portrays this character's search for the answers through flashbacks to his past as well as new events that are occurring in his present. The two paths that he could have taken were shown. He begins questioning if he had made the right choice with his current life. A life which he thought he would never want when he was younger and rebellious. The "9 to 5" job that we, or at least some of us, have all dreaded in fear of the death of our own creativity and individualism. The main male character basically is the imperfect hero with imperfect thoughts, much akin to the "hero" that we can hope to be at this day and age.
The last line in the movie, "If not now, then, never." is a line we always hear but take its meaning for granted. Truly, if happiness is not found in the moment..in the "now"..then, where else can it ever be?
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
Strangers in the night, 17 April 2000
Author: MuteMae
It's 1977 and Chris is a 30ish bloke who still has the eager, wistful face of an angelic adolescent, enjoys a placid existence in the London suburbs, taking comforting in his wife, his baby, and his garden. Yet he's a haunted man. Spurred by the arrival of Toni, his rakish counterculture chum, he is tormented by visions of what might have been - the enticing word of sexual possibility he left behind, embodied in memories of his blissed out love affair with a sultry secretary during his bohemian Paris days in the late '60s. As the film glides back and forth between eras, the churning of Chris' heart comes to the force with with disarming intimacy. We feel as if we're seeing the formation of an individual: his all too brief fling with hedonism, the sadness and hidden wisdom of a path that seems to have choosen him rather than the other way around. "Metroland" is a no-fuss movie that casts a rich, tranquil spell. It's a rare portrait of a happy marriage that is honest about the complex currents of desire, and the drama is beautifully played by Bale who gawks with soulful sweetness, and Emily Watson does her most piercing work since "Breaking the waves."
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Take the train, 2 May 1999
Author: Brian Orndorf from Phoenix
"Metroland" Christian Bale stars as Chris, a 30 year old man who must reexamine his priorities and life choices once an old friend(Lee Ross) comes back into his life. The friend criticizes Chris on the lack of excitement in his life and urges him to leave his wife Marion (Emily Watson) and travel the world. As enticing the dramatic possibilities seem with this plot, "Metroland" takes all the expectations one might have and tries something new. It's a character piece, headlined with a smashing performance by Bale. It's also funny, bright, and deeply introspective. The plot takes us on a tour of Chris's past. A past that included a stay in Paris with a beautiful native. The woman teaches Chris the ways of love and bohemian lifestyle, a lifestyle Chris has always wanted. The section takes up about half of the film, and is the film's strongest suit. We see the very English Chris try to pass himself off as a Parisian and curse at other Brits, he also loses his virginity is a grandly comical scene. The other half of the film deals with Chris trying to justify his lack of shame in his calm, predictable life. Veteran director Philip Saville does a good job making sure the audience never loses faith in Chris. It could have been real easy to drag the film through a series of lame dramatics, but Saville gives realistic answers to realistic questions.
There are a lot of pluses in "Metroland". It's well written, sharply shot with a good eye for detail, and everybody out there knows how I feel about the brilliant Emily Watson. What I liked best, and this might seem weird, but with all the grotesque nudity in such films as "Go" and "He Got Game", "Metroland" is refreshingly blunt. There is a lot of bodies on display here, but in a very natural and - dare I say - beautiful way. It's not thrown in your face. It just is. This is a good movie that relies on a soft, steady narrative than a hyped, antsy one.------------- 8
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
A man questions his life's direction when an old friend comes for a visit., 10 April 1999
Author: FISK-2 from Jersey City, NJ
If Francois Truffaut were still alive today I think Metroland would easily fit into his oeuvre. A film about a person taking stock of himself at the crossroads, Metroland introduces us to a suburban utopia where people go to work everyday, take their kids to school, and wash their cars on the weekend. Christian Bale seems to accept this life until an old friend rings him up wanting to revisit the old times. Throughout the film we see what Bale's character could've been and how much happier he thought he was. Metroland's assertion is to accept life for what it is and not what it is not. Not everyone's cup of tea as evidenced by Bale's boyhood chum but being the film's setting takes place during the late seventies in England right before the rise of Thatcherism may be a subtle stab at what the middle class of the film will come to accept. Conformity over confrontation may ultimately be Metroland's theme no matter how much it hurts us to admit it.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Nostalgia for the ex-swinging bachelor, 19 May 2000
Author: Raymond Tan from Singapore
If you're a guy who had lots of fun in the past, but married now and in your thirties then it's easy to identify with this movie. Christian Bale plays Chris Lloyd, a family man tempted to go back to his devil-may-care bachelor days of the 60s. The temptation comes in the visit of old school chum, played by Lee Ross, who epitomizes everything that life should have turned out for Chris. Emily Watson plays the stabilizing force as Chris' wife who tries to keep him on the straight and narrow path. The movie brought back lots of nostalgia to me, especially my teenage days in the 80s. Everything is very British and the accent takes getting used to, but this is an entertaining story, based on a 1980 novel by Julian Barnes. My only gripe is that the color prints of the film were really bad, making it look dull and lifeless. I know the setting is 1977 but the whole production was disappointing.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Grooving in Metroland, 25 July 2007
Author: reel_emotion from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Based on the novel by Julian Barnes and directed by Philip Saville (Masterpiece Theatre's The Buccaneers, The Life and Loves of a She-Devil miniseries), Metroland is a charming little British movie. It's a character study of Chris, played by Christian Bale (American Psycho, Batman Begins, Rescue Dawn), in an early role that is a nice change of pace for him. Bale captures this sweet, geeky, funny every-man character brilliantly.
In 1977, now a married man with a baby girl, Chris lives in the suburb of Metroland, his hometown, where he vowed as a teenager that he would leave and never return. Every working day he takes the mass transit rail out of the suburb to London to his job at an advertising agency. He wanted to be a globe-trotting photographer, but settled for this.
Chris seems content with his life, but when his ne'er-do-well chum Toni, played by Lee Ross (Secrets and Lies), shows up, Chris has a midlife crisis, albeit a young midlife crisis. Toni's appearance brings back the memories of his carefree life before marriage and responsibility: during the 1960s, when he lives in Paris, takes photographs, and has his first serious girlfriend, Annick (Elsa Zylberstein). Bale plays a naive, love sick man to Annick's worldly, sexy French woman. They start an intense sexual affair, and Chris is quite smitten with Annick until he meets Marionall decked out in go-go boots, liquid eyeliner, and a That-Girl hair flip. Chris is attracted to Marion mainly because she can see through some of his foolishness. In one conversation between the tworeminiscent of It's a Wonderful Life, in which James Stewart informs Donna Reed that he doesn't want to marry or have kids, but then gleefully gives in, kissing Reed, Chris tells Marion that he wants to stay on in Paris and doesn't want to get married and have children. Marion cruelly replies, "You're not original enough to." Chris reconsiders his relationship with Annick, who he has nothing in common withonly lust. And he chooses Marion.
In one of many funny scenes, Chris is in bed with his wife, Marion, played by Emily Watson (Breaking the Waves, Hilary and Jackie, The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep). He starts kissing her sweetly, but she is too tired for that. He says to her, "I can't remember the last time." "Yesterday morning," she replies. Then he says, "Yeah, we used to do it three times a day." She says, "It only happened once, and you complained about being sore a week afterwards." He smiles and replies, "Sore, but very smug." This changes Marion's mind, but they are soon interrupted by their daughter's cry--such is the life of a family man.
During Toni's visit, Marion makes her dislike for him clear to Chris who defends his lifelong friend. Toni is bound and determined to lead Chris astray, so that Toni can prove to himself that he made the right decision not to settle down. Toni plays his part well as the devil on Chris' shoulder. At his party, Tony convinces one of his free minded girlfriends to give Chris a shag. Just as Chris is considering consummation, he imagines Marion being carried away in an ambulance. When Toni happens to pass by the room, Chris realizes that Toni put her up to itand is insulted and leaves. It shows how even the closest, longest friendships can die in adulthood when people choose to go down different paths. Later Chris suspects something happened between Marion and Toni, and he gets into fisticuffs with Toni. Marion tells Chris that he made a pass at her; she was somewhat tempted, but refused. As Toni gets ready to leave town, Chris and he make up somewhat half-heartedly.
While taking a bath together, Chris tells Marion about the girl at Toni's party who he nearly slept with, and, of course, Marion has an ongoing joke of telling Chris to go ahead and have an affair. Marion then reveals to Chris she had a one night stand long ago and tells him that it won't happen again. We don't know if this is true, or if Marion is only trying to spice things upbecause as a result of her confession, they have passionate sex. And afterwards she kids him about having sex with the girl at the party.
Christian Bale's mutton chops and flared collars and pants legs give the movie a real retro feel. Bale has some great comedic moments here. In one of two very good scenes, Toni takes Chris to a punk rock concert, but Chris hates punk and only tolerates it by getting drunk and stoned. Chris comes home quite randy and keeps trying to pull Marion down on the bed in his inebriated state. The other scene is Chris' first date with Annick in which he conspicuously kisses herand pulls her into bed awkwardly.
The female characters teeter on being stereotypical. Annick and Marion are the archetype of the all-knowing, all-beautiful, all-witty woman to the archetype of Chris as the bumbling, sex obsessed male. Emily Watson's performance elevates Marion's character, so she doesn't turn into a shrewwe can sympathize with her as Chris shuts her out as he daydreams about his glory days of youth. We also feel sympathy towards Annick as she goes from being the experienced one in the relationship to being the needy and jealous one as Chris matures.
I describe Metroland as a British cozy romantic dramedyif such a thing exists. Some memorable scenes and some funny moments make the film worthwhile. As does the good acting between Bale and Watson, who make it more than a forgettable flick. Bale and Watson have good chemistry and repeat that again in the 2002 Sci-Fi cult classic, Equilibrium. Metroland is a movie you rarely see now: a movie that deals intelligently and realistically with themes of adulthood.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Witty, thoughtful and funny..., 25 June 2006
Author: minkmocha from United States
I agree with all the posts about what this movie was about -- a man evaluating his present life. But what made this film so good to me was the fantastic acting by Christian Bale and Emily Watson who portrayed their characters so authentically. As a 30 yo single woman myself, the relationships portrayed in this movie came off in a genuine way. What it's like to be married for nearly 10 years and how to preserve the love in the relationship and yet deal w/ the tensions and problems from it. All of this was portrayed subtly, sensitively, and with humour at many times throughout this movie in a natural and unforced way. I credit this to Christian Bale and Emily Watson's acting abilities and the Director's talent. To me, underlying the mid-life crisis of one man in this movie is the theme of "relationship" and how he gets his life from them. Whether it's with his wife, girlfriend or best friend from childhood. I really thought everything about this moview was excellent: script, acting, directing, scenes. More than that, it captured the subtle nuances and emotions shared between people which wasn't stated in words but one "felt" as a viewer that one knew what that look meant or the silent treatment was for. It's now my favorite top 10 movies in my book.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Second half saves some unnecessary characters, 24 December 2005
Author: J Biz from United States
Metroland is true to the midlife crisis, except between two people who haven't quite reached that stage of their lives yet. Christian Bale plays an Englishman who begins to reminisce about his past in the mid and late '60s when an old friend (played by Lee Ross) comes back to stir up his life. While I felt that the story was strong and seemingly dramatic enough to keep me interested and entertained, the character played by Lee Ross just seemed unnecessary. This character is supposed to build the plot the first half of the movie and I felt this could've been reached in many other directions.
And if you love France, well, you'll love the beautiful depiction of French women with an excellent performance given by Elsa Zylberstein, Bale's character's 'old flame' that he thinks about constantly throughout the film.
Beautiful 'still' cinematography throughout is perfect for Bale's character's love for photography and makes the film very watchable just for art's sake.
By the time I reached the last 45 minutes or so, I was much more intrigued and worried for the well-being of Bale's marriage with his present day (1977) wife, played wonderfully by Emily Watson. The tension between the two of them throughout the film is far more than believable and I loved it.
While I wanted to give this movie a much higher rating, I think it is fair to say that the first half moves much too slow. I was also slightly disappointed by the ending of the film, but it was still a great surprise and hit me unexpectedly. I highly recommend for Bale/Watson fans.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Metroland...a state of mind, not a place., 25 June 2000
Author: Alex (stingaree1) from Texas
After several years of a happy marriage an old friend from his single years re-appears. The movie then lets us see in flashbacks how the main characters have evolved into an urban "long time married couple." The friend's return creates great tension between the husband and wife and leads the husband to a re-examination of his life. The characters play off each other very well and the actress that plays the French girlfriend was terrific. The best line in the movie was, "Oh, you'll get married and have a family, your not original enough not to." This film tells its story, develops the characters, and by the time it ends has tied everything up in nice packages leaving the viewer satisfied.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Baby Boomers Attractively Wallowing in Regrets and Good Music, 19 December 2005
Author: noralee from Queens, NY
"Metroland" should appeal to boomers, particularly ones who now find themselves in the suburbs and/or with families. (It did not appeal to the two senior citizen couples next to and in back of me who did not shut up throughout the whole movie as they didn't seem to grasp the concepts of flashbacks or fantasy images)
I'm sure there's other movies that have a friend and/or sibling interfering in a stable relationship and shaking the tree (my friend thought of "Hilary and Jackie"-- but maybe because both have Emily Watson, here bundled up in sweaters to try and make her less ravishing) but I couldn't think of one that deals with our time period of post-'60's measurements of personal happiness and fulfillment. We could relate to the English and Parisian experiences with parallel ones here from the same time periods of '68 vs. '78 (nicely accurate hair styles, make-up and clothes).
While there are no shortage of shots of gorgeous naked women, there's ironic visual comment regardless the lead character's lovemaking techniques don't improve over the decade of experience. One sees plenty of Christian Bale, such that I think it would, I imagine, appeal to gay men as well.
Nice use of punk music (freaking out the senior next to me!), otherwise the score was quite lovely by Mark Knopfler, with a closing song original to the movie, with apropos lyrics.
(originally written 4/17/1999)
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