Released in 1993, The
Piano won Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay for Jane Campion, who
was also the director, Best Actress for Holly Hunter, and Best Supporting
Actress for Anna Paquin. The Piano
also won the Palme d’Or, the highest prize given at the Cannes Film Festival. The
film is rated R for moments of extremely graphic sexuality. I don’t know why they
didn’t include mention of an extreme violent act in that explanation, as that
is what truly deserved the R rating.
The film is alternately depressing, erotic, tense, cruel,
and loving. If I could describe it for you in a term often used for a
particular genre of novel, I’d say it is literary, and metaphorical at times.
Jane Campion has written a screenplay that goes deep beneath the surface of
what we see occurring between the characters. It’s a story of love, jealousy,
rage and perseverance in an extremely harsh climate in 1850’s New Zealand.
Ada (Holly Hunter) is a mute Scottish woman whose father is
marrying her off to Stewart (Sam Neill), a landowner in New Zealand. She and
her young daughter Flora (Anna Paquin) arrive on the tumultuous shores with
their few belongings, including Ada’s cherished piano. Ada does not speak, and
expresses herself through playing her piano. She uses some type of sign
language with her daughter, or writes messages to those around her when she
wants to communicate something to them.
She is not enamored of Stewart who initially gives her some distance
in order for her to get to know him and hopefully develop some affection for
him. A neighbor, quite friendly with the local Maori tribes people, is George
Baines (Harvey Keitel). He is attracted to Ada, and this leads to events that
change everyone’s lives.
The forests of New Zealand are wet and dreary, filled with
mud from downpours of rain, and hardly any sun. It is not a hospitable
environment at all, and it looks as if no one ever really dries out. Despite
this, Ada and Flora attempt to make the best of it. In contrast, the scenes set
ocean side are particularly beautiful, Ada playing the piano while Flora
cavorts about doing cartwheels and making patterns in the sand with stones.
Both actresses give really outstanding performances. Holly
Hunter doesn’t say a word except for brief voice over’s at the beginning and
end of the film. Her actions and facial expressions have to tell her whole
story, as does her piano playing, which was actually Holly playing the piano. Anna
Paquin has such a strong well-developed character in Flora, and she was only nine
years old at the time. Her emotional outbursts contrast nicely with the
stolidity of her mother Ada. We never really hear the truth about Flora’s
father, or at least I suspect we haven’t, as Flora is a bit of a storyteller.
I have found that people either love or hate The Piano. It’s all up to the subjective
tastes of the viewer.