The film toggles between two timelines. In the bleak, grey present of 1974, Tom Crick (Jeremy Irons), a disillusioned history teacher at a struggling London secondary school, faces professional obsolescence. As his colleagues advocate for more "relevant" subjects, Tom responds not with a lecture, but with a story: the story of his youth in the watery, desolate Fenlands of 1940s England.
The film rests entirely on the weary, world-weary shoulders of Jeremy Irons. With his reedy voice and pale, melancholic eyes, Irons perfectly embodies a man drowning in his own memories. He delivers his winding, digressive lectures to his unruly students with the gravity of a prophet, making the act of storytelling feel like a desperate act of salvation. Ethan Hawke matches him as the younger Tom, capturing the volatile mix of adolescent passion and impending dread. Waterland -1992-
In a cinematic landscape dominated by blockbuster action and romantic comedies, Stephen Gyllenhaal’s Waterland emerges as a quietly devastating and deeply atmospheric oddity. Based on Graham Swift’s acclaimed 1983 novel, this is not a film for those seeking easy answers or fast-paced thrills. Instead, it is a slow, deliberate, and hypnotic meditation on history, guilt, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive. The film toggles between two timelines
Through flashbacks, we meet young Tom (a hauntingly earnest Ethan Hawke) and his childhood sweetheart, Mary (Lena Headey in her film debut). Their innocent love unfolds against the backdrop of a strange, isolated community living on the edge of man-made drainage channels and endless flat horizons. When a local boy, Freddie Parr, is found drowned, and a secret pregnancy threatens to tear their world apart, Tom’s personal history becomes a mystery story about the lengths to which people will go to bury the past. The film rests entirely on the weary, world-weary