SYNOPSIS
Based on the best-selling John le Carré novel and from the Academy Award-nominated director of "City of God." In a remote area of Northern Kenya, activist Tessa Quayle (Rachel Weisz) is found brutally murdered. Tessa's companion, a doctor, appears to have fled the scene, and the evidence points to a crime of passion. Members of the British High Commission in Nairobi assume that Tessa's widower, their mild-mannered and unambitious colleague Justin Quayle (Ralph Fiennes), will leave the matter to them. They could not be more wrong. Haunted by remorse and jarred by rumors of his late wife's infidelities, Quayle surprises everyone by embarking on a personal odyssey that will take him across three continents. Using his privileged access to diplomatic secrets, he will risk his own life, stopping at nothing to uncover and expose the truth - a conspiracy more far-reaching and deadly than Quayle could ever have imagined.
Review by
KEVIN MILLER
In terms of decoding what is at first glance a rather unusual title, one of the most poignant scenes in this film is a brief homemade video during which Tessa films her sleeping husband Justin—a British diplomat stationed in Kenya—while joking about how he is probably dreaming of a “world without weeds.” No doubt, she isn’t far from the truth, seeing as Justin devotes most of his spare time to caring for his immaculate garden. But can his dream ever become reality? And is his love of horticulture—and his need to eradicate weeds—a healthy way of coping with life? Or does it represent something else, a retreat from life perhaps, a denial of the weed-infested reality that is all around him? Tessa’s tone definitely implies the latter.
And Tessa should know. In contrast to Justin’s reticence, she has taken it upon herself to root some of the weeds of injustice that Justin and his cohorts at Britain’s High Commission in Kenya have chosen to ignore—a fact that irritates the High Commission to no end. When Tessa catches wind of a plot by a multinational drug company to use Kenyans as Guinea pigs for a new tuberculosis drug in exchange for free medication, she and a Kenyan doctor named Arnold attempt to blow the whistle. Not long afterwards, Tessa and Arnold are found murdered in a remote region of northern Kenya. Stunned by his wife’s death, Justin is finally drawn out of the safety of his garden and into the jungle of the real world as he attempts to discover who killed Tessa and why and what the true nature of her relationship with Arnold really was.
During his journey, Justin unearths a twisted trail of corruption and greed. But he uncovers far more than mere facts. He also discovers a love he never knew he had, a love that frees him to finally become the person he has always longed to be. Despite Justin’s success at solving the mystery of Tessa’s death, a pall of tragedy continues to hang over his life, because even though he has found the truth, it still seems like too little, too late. Then again, perhaps a bit of truth is better than no truth at all.
Choosing to set such a personal story against a backdrop of institutional corruption works well for a couple of reasons. First, it adds several layers of depth to what could have easily been a one-dimensional diatribe against the evils purportedly carried out by multinational pharmaceutical companies. Second, it roots this larger issue within the lives of particular individuals, illustrating how none of us can absolve ourselves of guilt when it comes to such meta-crimes. Even if we are not willingly participating in them, could we be tacitly ignoring them—even profiting from them—as the British were, or perhaps hiding out in our own climate-controlled version of Justin’s garden and denying their existence? It seems that very few of us are like Tessa, actively seeking the truth knowing full well that the quest for justice could lead to the sacrifice of all we hold dear. Few of us value the lives of our neighbors so highly and our own lives so little.
However, this film seems to suggest that as long as we cling to self-interest and ignore or deny such crimes, not only will injustice persist; it will hamper us from achieving the fullness of humanity for which all of us long, both as individuals and as a society. Only when we are brave enough to accept that the world is full of weeds and then set about rooting them out will we ever become the people we were created to be.