Clarissa Dalloway looks back on her youth as she readies for a gathering at her house. The wife of a legislator and a doyenne of London's upper-crust party scene, Clarissa finds that the plight of ailing war veteran Septimus Warren Smith reminds her of a past romance with Peter Walsh. In flashbacks, young Clarissa explores her possibilities with Peter.
Vanessa Redgrave
Mrs. Clarissa Dalloway
Natascha McElhone
Young Clarissa
Michael Kitchen
Peter Walsh
Alan Cox
Young Peter
Sarah Badel
Lady Rosseter
Lena Headey
Young Sally
John Standing
Richard Dalloway
Robert Portal
Young Richard
Oliver Ford Davies
Hugh Whitbread
Hal Cruttenden
Young Hugh
Rupert Graves
Septimus Warren Smith
Amelia Bullmore
Rezia Warren Smith
Margaret Tyzack
Lady Bruton
Robert Hardy
Sir William Bradshaw
Richenda Carey
Lady Bradshaw
Katie Carr
Elizabeth Dalloway
Selina Cadell
Miss Kilman
Amanda Drew
Lucy
Phyllis Calvert
Aunt Helena
John Franklyn-Robbins
Lionel
Alistair Petrie
Herbert
Rupert Baker
Joseph Breitkopf
Janet Henfrey
Miss Pym
Polly Pritchett
Nursemaid
Jane Whittenshaw
First Woman by the Lake
Susie Fairfax
Second Woman by the Lake
Hilda Braid
Woman in Deckchair
Derek Smee
Man in Deckchair
Fanny Carby
Singer
Denis Lill
Doctor Holmes
Richard Stirling
Receptionist
Neville Phillips
Mr. Wilkins
Peter Cellier
Lord Lezham
Kate Binchy
Ellie Henderson
Edward Jewesbury
Professor Brierly
Tony Steedman
Prime Minister
Faith Brook
Lady Bexborough
Nancy Nevinson
Mrs. Hilberry
Christopher Staines
Willie
Oscar Pearce
Bookshop Assistant
Reg Thomason
Reggie
Director
Marleen Gorris
Novel
Virginia Woolf
Screenplay
Eileen Atkins
Script Consultant
Anthony Davies
July 17, 2024
6
It's the morning of her party, and the eponymous "Clarissa" (Vanessa Redgrave) is a little apprehensive. She's married to a politician (John Standing) who has jilted her for luncheon on this important day, so she sets off to buy some flowers then returns to find she has an unexpected visitor. "Peter" (Michael Kitchen) and she have some history, and as the day unfolds we learn a little of just how that played out thanks to some flashbacks with Alan Cox and Natascha McElhone as their younger selves. These depict the build up to decisions and choices that maybe one, or both, wish now had been made differently. We are also offered a softly dramatised glimpse of the political environment that prevailed in Britain shortly after the end of the Great War. The landed gentry now struggling to maintain their previous degrees of influence, the increasing role of women - the changing political landscape, the end of deference are all woven into the fabric as the party looms and it's hostesss stresses. In parallel, there is the far more interesting storyline developing with a convincing Rupert Graves as the shell-shocked "Septimus Warren Smith". He's returned from the war struggling with any sort of re-adjustment to peacetime life and that's causing considerable distress for his wife (Amelia Bullmore) that isn't really being helped by psychiatrist "Sir William Bradshaw" (Robert Hardy). Generally, this is a grand looking drama featuring an who's who of established British talent, but the effort from Redgrave borders a little on the soporific and aside from the emotionally charged scenes with Graves, the whole pace of the film struggles to get out of second gear as it meanders along offering us a rather lacklustre observation of the lives of people in whom, mostly, I had little interest. It's perfectly watchable and is the kind of film we Brits do well, but it's a bit lightweight on the character front.