Christoph Waltz in his directorial debut and starring as the obsequious, uxorious “Ulrich Mott” (loosely based on the murder of socialite Viola Herms Drath) validates, once again, his transformative powers; with chameleon aptness he imbues Mott’s pathological gallantry with slithering, scintillating charm; he convinced Washington Grand Dame, “Elsa Brecht”, (indomitable Vanessa Redgrave) besting him by forty years, to become his wife and ingress into a realm of acceptance, elitism, verboten because of his adulterated background; his genius centers on the “tangled web he weaves” when he perpetually “practices to deceive”; his toxicity infects his preposterous schemes, duping his wife but not his daughter-in-law, “Amanda” (divine Annette Benning) who sees through his conniving, scandalous contrivances.
“Georgetown’s” intrigue lies in Mott’s, a man of innate skills and intelligence, choice of a life infected with duplicity and faux inventiveness; Elsa’s embarrassing nuptial pairing and the decay of “The Worst Marriage in Georgetown” (Franklin Foer’s 2012 New York Times article); ambitiously flawed but watching Waltz is delicious, bristling, bewitching pleasure.
THREE & ½ STARS!!!
Peneflix