
Byatt.) It’s more a chronicle of how love and hate can make one do funny things.

(It is adapted, very loosely, from a novella by renowned British writer A.S. DeMille aren’t sufficient preparation for the production design and CGI-driven phantasmagoria of this tale, which features, among other things, a kind of self-playing lyre, the better to augment the song of Solomon that seduces Sheba.Īs it turns out, over the centuries, it’s always a woman who’s responsible for the djinn’s captivity, but this is not a nesting-doll tale of misogyny. She was beauty itself,” the Djinn avers, and in the form of actress Aamito Lagum, she indeed is), until that wily Solomon came along. He was a consort, or so he claims, and teacher to the famed Queen of Sheba (“She was not beautiful. The djinn’s first tale sets the tone and pace for the rest of the movie. And so, rather than a wish-fulfillment journey, Alithea begins an interrogation. There’s a reason they end up trapped in bottles, after all. The wish-fulfillment narratives involving genies famously never work out-either due to the stupidity/venality of the wisher or, more pertinent to Alithea, the fact that genies are notorious tricksters. As a narratologist, Alithea knows that a djinn is one gift horse worth looking in the mouth. As played by Idris Elba, the djinn is a figure grave, funny, absurd, and moving.Īs for those wishes: not so fast.

And yes, she unleashes a genie, or djinn, and a giant one at that-the sight of his enormous foot opening her bathroom door is something unusual to be sure-who, upon learning some English, proffers Alithea the standard three wishes. Back in her hotel room, she tries to scrub off an ornamental bottle she picked up at an antique shop. We are to ask, later, whether it was a hallucination or something ancient and real calling to her. The movie will be about emotion, but also about storytelling and stories.ĭuring a lecture Alithea faints after a hallucination. “She wrote Death on the Nile here,” Alithea is told. Arriving in a storybook-bright Istanbul for a conference, she’s put up in the Agatha Christie room of the Pera Palace Hotel. Introducing herself in voiceover as a “narratologist,” that is, a studier of stories, she cherishes her solitary self-sufficiency.

In the case of Alithea, the academic played with traits both prim and feisty by Tilda Swinton, the longing is one she denies. And very much about the emotion tagged in the title. “Three Thousand Years of Longing,” the new film directed by the protean “Mad Max: Fury Road” creator George Miller, is very much a battleground. Love, hate, action, violence, death, in one word, emotions.” In a much-bruited scene in Jean-Luc Godard’s 1966 film “ Pierrot le Fou,” the sui generis American filmmaker Sam Fuller turns up at a party and is asked by Jean-Paul Belmondo to define cinema.
