Priceless
Rubies is a diamond in the rough
by Peter Keough
A PRICE ABOVE RUBIES, Written and directed by Boaz Yakin. With Renée Zellweger, Christopher
Eccleston, Julianna Margulies, Allen Payne, Glenn Fitzgerald, Kim Hunter, John
Randolph, Kathleen Chalfant, Shelton Dane, and Jackie Ryan. A Miramax Films
release. At the Kendall Square and the West Newton (tentative) and in the
suburbs.
At first glance, a feminist parable set in a Chassidic
community starring non-Jewish actors doesn't seem likely to win many fans. But
if nothing else, Boaz Yakin, writer/director of A Price Above Rubies, has chutzpah. His debut film, Fresh, drew the ire
of critics who felt he was presumptuous in making a film about
African-Americans and Hispanics in the inner city (nobody seemed concerned that
in this tale of a chess prodigy turned drug dealer the director wasn't a
grandmaster). More so in that impressive if flawed debut feature, spurious
controversy mires Yakin's Rubies in the rough. Transcending its
immediate subject, the film explores the universal themes of desire,
compromise, loyalty, treachery, and the affirmation of art in a bold and
sensitively crafted drama with a vivid setting and complex, sympathetic
characters brought to life by outstanding performances.
Foremost among the latter is Renée Zellweger, Academy Award nominee for
last year's Jerry Maguire. She's Sonia, an independent-minded young
woman introduced as a young girl (Jackie Ryan) in an awkwardly lyrical
prologue. Sonia declares that she loves her sickly brother Yossi (Shelton Dane)
more than God; Yossi reproves her by relating a story about a Wandering
Jew-like family relative who had similarly offended the deity. Then he gives
her a ruby for her birthday. Sonia's discerning eye detects that the ruby is a
fake and rejects it (the story, on the other hand, sounds phony, but Yakin
unfortunately holds onto it). Crestfallen, Yossi sets out to prove himself by
swimming in a lake and, presumably, drowning.
A cut is made to the adult Sonia giving birth. She retains her legacy of
discernment, integrity, and irrepressible self-assertion, as is seen at her
newborn's bris, where she threatens the attending rabbi with a slap if he makes
her baby cry. Husband Mendel (Glenn Fitzgerald), on the other hand, a slavishly
traditional man-child astute in the Torah, faints at the rite's climax.
Theirs is no match made in heaven, as an excruciating lovemaking scene makes
clear (Mendel is against such non-reproductive niceties as disrobing or
experiencing pleasure). Sonia finds herself suffering really hot flashes
and an irrational attraction to her in-laws, such as strait-laced sister-in-law
Rachel (Julianna Margulies), who comforts Sonia in her travail only to be
nonplussed when she gets a big wet one on the lips. Somewhat cannier is
Mendel's brother Sender (Christopher Eccleston), a jewelry dealer whose books
don't bear close inspection. He respects Sonia's shrewd gemologist instincts;
more important he sees in her a kindred, subversive sexuality. As he explains
to her the duties of the job he's offering her with his outfit, he gracelessly
shtups her against the wall.
Needless to say, since many viewers will be scandalized at this point, Sonia
is racked with guilt and not a little exhilaration -- piqued, no doubt, by
pesky visitations by the deceased Yossi. That magical-realist intrusion,
supplemented by appearances by the Beggar Woman (Kathleen Chalfant), the
embodiment of the haunted soul of Yossi's tale, may have seemed a good idea at
the time to Yakin but it's more Isaac Bashevis Singer than his story needs or
can bear. More to the point is Ramon (Allen Payne), a jewelry-district working
drone whose kitschy designs Sonia encourages as his hunky virility heats up her
suppressed desires.
For what's really priceless in Rubies are the uncompromising
characterizations and the courage of the performers in pursuing them to
whatever realms, however debased or elevated, they might lead. As the clueless
but pure-hearted Mendel, Fitzgerald is infuriating and endearing, and as his
sister Margulies is tough but sympathetic in a role that could easily have been
two-dimensional. Eccleston exudes diabolical charm as the tempter whose vile
intents backfire.
Most of all it's Zellweger who triumphs, her putty face malleable but
illuminated as it mirrors her tumultuous spiritual and carnal journey.
Heartbreaking in its defiance and contrition as she faces her accusers, bracing
as she faces down her business rivals with savvy aplomb, wrenching when she
loses everything and thrilling when she gains a new life, her gemlike
performance is well worth the price of Yakin's occasional sophomoric lapses and
his accusers' small-minded intolerance.