the 1980s  -  the 1990s  -  film reviews - theater reviews


New York Daily News 
July 14, 1999

 Colin Firth is loveable and hateful in 'My Life So Far'

'So Far' so good for Colin Firth

by Nancy Mills
Special to the New York Daily News

You either love him or you hate him.

Three years ago Colin FIrth was anointed heartthrob-in-chief after a terrific 
performance in the A&E miniseries "Pride and Prejudice." Then, in this year's 
"Shakespeare in Love," the 38-year-old Brith turned hateful as the man who 
comes between Gwyneth Paltrow and her true love, Will Shakespeare.

Now, in the coming-of-age story "My Life So Far," which opens Friday, Firth 
is loveable and hateful at the same time.

This pleases him.

"A character who's straight down the line, with no twists or quirks, is boring," he 
says. "You've got to have something to play. I like to watch stories where you're 
sure of what you're seeing--and then you're not."

At first, Firth's character--a charmingly eccentric inventor--seems to be the 
ideal dad. But charm can be a great deceiver, as his 10-year-old son 
discovers. When the boy's uncle (Malcolm McDowell) brings his young fiancee 
(Irene Jacob) to visit, unexpected passions surface.

"Charming boyishness is dangerous to those close to it," Firth says. "If 
you're fundamentally immature, you'll be incapable of self-denial in real 
relationships, and you'll end up hurting the people around you."

Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.

the 1980s  -  the 1990s  -  film reviews - theater reviews