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Film review: Blithe Spirit

This new version of Noel Coward's classic is flawed but there's much to love says Linda Marric

January 13, 2021 11:11
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1 min read

Dan Stevens, Leslie Mann, Isla Fisher and Dame Judi Dench head a stellar cast in Edward Hall's new adaptation of Noël Coward's much loved 1941 comedy play Blithe Spirit.  First adapted by David Lean in the 1940s with Rex Harrison and Margaret Ratherford in the leading roles, Blithe Spirit tells the story of a couple haunted by the ghost of the husbands’s first wife. The film was originally set to be released by Studiocanal for the big screen last year, but has now been acquired by Sky Cinema due to the ongoing Covid crisis.

Renowned crime novelist Charles Condomine (Stevens) is struggling with writers block, and with a deadline looming he must find a way to finally finish a screenplay for his film producer father-in-law’s latest production. For inspiration, Charles turns to bohemian psychic medium Madame Arcati (Dench) to arrange a séance in the home he shares with his wife Ruth (Fisher).

All hell breaks loose when the séance results in the accidental summoning of Charles’ late wife Elvira (Mann) who is furious to find out that the man she loves has already moved on and remarried. As Ruth scrambles to send her rival back to the after life with the help of the hapless Madam Arcati, Elvira has a plan of her own as she embarks on a quest to drag Charles back with her to the afterlife.

Director Edward Hall - known for his extensive TV work which includes titles such as The Durrells and Downton Abbey - presents a flawed, but engaging adaptation of Coward’s much loved play. He and writers Nick Moorcroft, Meg Leonard, and Piers Ashworth have given us a slightly dated, yet stylish screwball comedy which owes most of its charm and appeal to its stellar cast.