What Maise Knew is taken from the novel of the same name written by Henry James in 1898. The movie tells the story of six-year-old Maise (Onata Aprile) who becomes the human volleyball between bitterly divorcing parents, played by Steve Coogan and Julianne Moore. Maise has that wide-eyed innocence and purity of a child who has done no wrong and who deserves the best love and attention any child should have. Maise does get some of that devotion from the new spouses of her divorced parents; she smiles and comes alive under their care, and they instantly become her loving caregivers.
The ill-suited parents can do nothing right, saying “I
love you,” but leaving – or rather dumping – Maise on the street with no
assurance of anyone to care for her, or forgetting her at school hours after
she was supposed to be picked up by mom. Their shallowness occurs throughout the entire
movie, and Coogan and Moore do an outstanding job as neglectful, self-centered
and angry people who stop at nothing to lash out at each other even if it means
torment and misery for their precious child.
It pained me to watch this movie as it might any
child who has ever been the object of two warring parents. Neither one has the
time or true desire to keep Maise emotionally healthy and happy but she’s
almost too valuable to let go of in terms of being a tool for taunting the
other parent. Onata plays the innocent
victim with minimal ‘acting’ relying mostly upon haunting looks that require
little or no dialogue.
A little research showed me that James wrote this
story as a thorough condemnation of parents abandoning their responsibilities
to their children. During his time, he saw English society as becoming more
corrupt and decadent and What Maise Knew
was his harshest indictment of these kinds of parents.
Could I recommend this movie? Yes, in terms of the
acting by all players, however, no, if you’re likely to be waiting for a bigger
shoe to drop than is delivered in this film, or if you’re one of the walking
wounded from a crummy childhood and/or split home. When I escaped to the movies in this film I wound up in a place I didn't really enjoy being.Two out of five possible ticket stubs |