Heavenly Creatures

Heavenly Creatures

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Peter Jackson
Produced by Jim Booth
Peter Jackson
Written by Fran Walsh
Peter Jackson
Starring
Music by Peter Dasent
Cinematography Alun Bollinger
Edited by Jamie Selkirk
Production
company
WingNut Films
New Zealand Film Commission
Distributed by Miramax Films (US)
Release dates
  • 14 October 1994 (1994-10-14) (New Zealand)
  • 16 November 1994 (1994-11-16) (US)
Running time
99 minutes[1]
109 minutes (Director's cut)
Country New Zealand
Language English
Budget $5 million (est.)
Box office $5,438,120[2]

Heavenly Creatures is a 1994 New Zealand psychological thriller directed by Peter Jackson, from a screenplay he co-wrote with his partner, Fran Walsh, about the notorious 1954 Parker–Hulme murder case in Christchurch, New Zealand. The film features Melanie Lynskey and Kate Winslet in their screen debuts with supporting roles by Sarah Peirse, Diana Kent, Clive Merrison, and Simon O'Connor. The main premise deals with the obsessive relationship between two teenage girls, Pauline Parker and Juliet Hulme who murder Parker's mother. The events of the film cover the period from their meeting in 1952 to the murder in 1954.

The film opened in 1994 at the 51st Venice International Film Festival, where it won the Silver Lion, and became one of the best-received films of the year. Reviewers praised most aspects of the production, with particular attention given to the performances by the previously unknown Winslet and Lynskey, as well as for Jackson's directing. The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay.

Plot

In 1950s Christchurch, New Zealand, a 14-year-old girl from a working-class family, Pauline Parker (Lynskey), befriends the more affluent English 15-year-old Juliet Hulme (Winslet) when Juliet transfers to Pauline's school. They bond over a shared history of severe childhood disease and isolating hospitalizations, and over time develop an intense friendship. Pauline admires Juliet's outspoken arrogance and beauty. Together they paint, write stories, make Plasticine figurines, and eventually create a fantasy kingdom called Borovnia. It is the setting of the adventure novels they write together, which they hope to have published and eventually made into films in Hollywood. Over time it begins to be as real to them as the real world. Pauline's relationship with her mother, Honora, becomes increasingly hostile and the two fight constantly. This angry atmosphere is in contrast to the peaceful intellectual life Juliet shares with her family. Pauline spends most of her time at the Hulmes', where she feels accepted. Juliet introduces Pauline to the idea of "the Fourth World", a Heaven without Christians where music and art are celebrated. Juliet believes she will go there when she dies. Certain actors and musicians are "saints" in this afterlife.

During a day trip to Port Levy, Juliet's parents announce that they are going away and plan to leave Juliet behind. Her fear of being left alone makes her hysterical, culminating in her first direct experience of the Fourth World, perceiving it as a land where all is beautiful and she is safe. She asks Pauline to come with her, and the world that Juliet sees becomes visible to Pauline, too. This is presented as a shared spiritual vision, a confirmation of their "Fourth World" belief, that influences the girls' predominant reality and affects their perception of events in the everyday world.

Juliet is diagnosed with tuberculosis and is sent to a clinic. Again her parents leave the country, leaving her alone and desperately missing Pauline. Pauline is desolate without her, and the two begin an intense correspondence, writing not only as themselves, but in the roles of the royal couple of Borovnia. During this time Pauline begins a sexual relationship with a lodger, which makes Juliet jealous. For both of them, their fantasy life becomes a useful escape when under stress in the real world, and the two engage in increasingly violent, even murderous, fantasies about people who oppress them. After four months, Juliet is released from the clinic and their relationship intensifies. Juliet's father blames the intensity of the relationship on Pauline and speaks to her parents, who take her to a doctor. The doctor suspects that Pauline is homosexual, and considers this a cause of her increasing anger at her mother as well as her dramatic weight loss.

Juliet catches her mother having an affair with one of her psychiatric clients and threatens to tell her father, but her mother tells her he knows. Shortly afterward, the two announce their intention to divorce, upsetting Juliet. Soon it is decided that the family will leave Christchurch, with Juliet to be left with a relative in South Africa. She becomes increasingly hysterical at the thought of leaving Pauline, and the two girls plan to run away together. When that plan becomes impossible, the two begin to talk about murdering Pauline's mother as they see her as the primary obstacle to their being together. As the date of Juliet's departure nears, it is decided that the two girls should spend the last three weeks together at Juliet's house. At the end of that time, Pauline returns home and the two finalize plans for the murder. Honora plans a day for the three of them at Victoria Park, and the girls decide this will be the day. Juliet puts a broken piece of brick into a stocking and they go off to the park. After having tea, the three walk down the path and when Honora bends over to pick up a pink charm the girls have put there, Juliet and Pauline bludgeon her to death.

In a postscript, it is revealed that the next day Pauline's diary was found in which the plan for the murder had been outlined which led to Pauline and Juliet getting arrested. The two are tried, convicted, and sentenced to prison. It is a condition of their eventual release that they never meet again.

Cast

Peter Jackson cameos as a homeless man outside of a theatre.

Production

Development

Fran Walsh suggested to Peter Jackson (who was noted for horror-comedy films) that they write a film about the notorious Parker-Hulme murder. Jackson took the idea to his long-time collaborator, producer Jim Booth (who died after filming). The three filmmakers decided that the film should tell the story of the friendship between the two girls rather than focus on the murder and trial. "The friendship was for the most part a rich and rewarding one, and we tried to honour that in the film. It was our intention to make a film about a friendship that went terribly wrong," said Peter Jackson.[3]

Walsh had been interested in the case since her early childhood. "I first came across it in the late sixties when I was ten years old.[3] The Sunday Times devoted two whole pages to the story with an accompanying illustration of the two girls. I was struck by the description of the dark and mysterious friendship that existed between them—by the uniqueness of the world the two girls had created for themselves."

Jackson and Walsh researched the story by reading contemporary newspaper accounts of the trial. They decided that the sensational aspects of the case that so titillated newspaper readers in 1954 were far removed from the story that Jackson and Walsh wished to tell. "In the 1950s, Pauline Parker and Juliet Hulme were branded as possibly the most evil people on earth. What they had done seemed without rational explanation, and people could only assume that there was something terribly wrong with their minds," states Jackson. To bring a more humane version of events to the screen, the filmmakers undertook a nationwide search for people who had close involvement with Pauline Parker and Juliet Hulme forty years earlier. This included tracing and interviewing seventeen of their former classmates and teachers from Christchurch Girls' High School. In addition, Jackson and Walsh spoke with neighbours, family friends, colleagues, policemen, lawyers and psychologists. Jackson and Walsh also read Pauline's diary, in which she made daily entries documenting her friendship with Juliet Hulme and events throughout their relationship. From the diary entries, it became apparent that Pauline and Juliet were intelligent, imaginative, outcast young women who possessed a wicked and somewhat irreverent sense of humor. All of Pauline's voice-overs are excerpts from her journal entries.

Casting

The role of Pauline was cast after Walsh scouted schools all over New Zealand to find a Pauline 'look-alike'. She had trouble finding an actress who resembled Pauline and had acting talent before discovering Melanie Lynskey. Kate Winslet auditioned for the part of Juliet, winning the role over 175 other girls. The girls were both so absorbed by their roles that they kept on acting as Pauline and Juliet after the filming was done, as is described on Jackson's website.

Principal photography

The entire film was shot on location in Christchurch on the South Island of New Zealand in 1993. Jackson has been quoted as saying "Heavenly Creatures is based on a true story, and as such I felt it important to shoot the movie on locations where the actual events took place."[3]

Post-production

The visual effects in the film were handled by the then newly created Weta Digital.[4] The girls' fantasy life, and the "Borovnian" extras (the characters the girls made up) were supervised by Richard Taylor while the digital effects were supervised by George Port. Taylor and his team constructed over 70 full-sized latex costumes to represent the "Borovnian" crowds—plasticine figures that inhabit Pauline and Juliet's magical fantasy world. Heavenly Creatures contains over thirty shots that were digitally manipulated ranging from the morphing garden of the "Fourth World," to castles in fields, to the sequences with "Orson Welles" (Jean Guérin).

Music

The Doris Day LP record, Bright and Shiny, which the young lodger buys and shows to the family (but which he never gets to play), was recorded in 1961.

  1. "Just a Closer Walk with Thee" – Choirs of Burnside High School, Cashmere High School, Hagley Community College, Villa Maria College
  2. "Be My Love" – Nicholas Brodszky, Sammy Cahn
  3. "The Donkey Serenade" – performed by Mario Lanza
  4. "(How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window?" – Bob Merrill; sung by the actors
  5. "Funiculì, Funiculà" – Written by Luigi Denza, Peppino Turco; performed by Mario Lanza
  6. "E lucevan le stelle" – Giacomo Puccini
  7. "The Loveliest Night of the Year" – Mario Lanza
  8. "Sono Andati" from La Bohème; written by Giacomo Puccini; performed by Kate Winslet
  9. "The Humming Chorus" – Performed by the Hungarian State Opera
  10. "You'll Never Walk Alone" – Mario Lanza

Reception

Critical response

The film has garnered wide critical praise. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes listed an average 8.2/10 rating from 48 reviews, with a 94% Tomatometer assessment (as of January, 2015).[5]

Nick Hyman, writing for Metacritic, thought that 1994's Oscar-winning Forrest Gump was equally matched by "Memorable Film(s) Not Nominated for Best Picture", including Heavenly Creatures, of which Hyman said, "Peter Jackson's masterful blend of fantastical visions and a heartbreaking real-life murder tragedy has arguably never been topped."[6]

Owen Gleiberman, writing for Entertainment Weekly, gave the film a B+ and said, "Set in the early '50s, in the New Zealand village of Christchurch, this ripe hallucination of a movie — a rhapsody in purple — has been photographed in sun-drenched candy color that lends it the surreal clarity of a dream... There's something bracing about the way that Heavenly Creatures serves up its heroines' fantasies with literal-minded brute force." Gleiberman complains that Jackson never quite explains "why the two girls have metamorphosed into the '50s teenybop answer to Leopold and Loeb," yet concludes, "Still, if the pleasures of Heavenly Creatures remain defiantly on the surface, on that level the movie is a dazzler."[7]

Box office

Heavenly Creatures had a limited box office success, but performed admirably in various countries, including the United States, where it grossed a total of $3,049,135 during its limited run in 57 theatres; it gained $5,438,120 worldwide.

Accolades

Heavenly Creatures was an Academy Award nominee in 1994 for Best Original Screenplay and won for Best British Actress at the 1st Empire Awards.[8] It featured in a number of international film festivals, and received very favourable reviews worldwide.

The film made top ten of the year lists in Time, The Guardian, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The New Zealand Herald. The film also did exceptionally well at the 1995 New Zealand film and television awards. The rights to the film were immediately purchased by Miramax.[9]

Awards and nominations

Year Event Award Nominee Result
1995 Academy Awards Best Original Screenplay Peter Jackson
Fran Walsh
Nominated
1995 Chicago Film Critics Association Best Foreign Language Film Nominated
1994 Chicago International Film Festival Best Feature Peter Jackson Nominated
1996 Empire Awards Best British Actress Kate Winslet Won
1995 Festival international du film fantastique de Gérardmer Grand Prize Peter Jackson Won
1996 London Film Critics' Circle Director of the Year Peter Jackson Won
British Actress of the Year Kate Winslet Won
Film of the Year Nominated
1994 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Picture Heavenly Creatures 2nd Place
1994 National Board of Review Top 10 Films Won
1995 New Zealand Film and Television Awards Best Actress Melanie Lynskey Won
Best Supporting Actress Sarah Peirse Won
Best Foreign Performer Kate Winslet Won
Best Director Peter Jackson Won
Best Film Score Peter Dasent Won
Best Editing Jamie Selkirk Won
Best Soundtrack Mike Hopkins
Greg Bell
Michael Hedges
Won
Best Design Grant Major Won
Best Contribution to Design Richard Taylor
George Port
Won
1995 New Zealand Film and Television Awards Best Cinematography Alun Bollinger Nominated
1994 Toronto International Film Festival Metro Media Award Peter Jackson Won
1994 Venice Film Festival Silver Lion Peter Jackson Won
1995 Writers Guild of America Award Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh Nominated

Home media

In 1996, the film was released on videocassette and on Laserdisc at its original runtime of 99 minutes. In 2002, the film received DVD releases in Region 1 and Region 4 in an "uncut version" which ran for 109 minutes. Region 2 released the original 99 minute theatrical version. In 2011, the U.S. online movie services Netflix and HuluPlus began streaming the film in its original 99 minute version.

See also

References

  1. "HEAVENLY CREATURES (18)". British Board of Film Classification. 3 January 1995. Retrieved 11 November 2012.
  2. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=heavenlycreatures.htm
  3. 1 2 3 Fourth World – The Heavenly Creatures Website
  4. "The Birth of Weta", 1994, The Edge TV series, S2E7
  5. "Heavenly Creatures". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  6. Hyman, Nick (February 22, 2011). "The Least Deserving Best Picture Winners Since 1990". Metacritic. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
  7. Gleiberman, Owen (November 25, 1994). "Heavenly Creatures (1994)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
  8. "Empire Awards Past Winners - 1996". Empireonline.com. Bauer Consumer Media. 2003. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
  9. "Heavenly Creatures". NZ On Screen. Retrieved 12 August 2014.

Further reading

External links

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