The Life And Death Of Peter Sellers review

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"There used to be a me behind the mask, but I had it surgically removed." So spoke Peter Sellers - legendary comic, man of a thousand faces and, according to Stephen Hopkins' insightful biopic, a mum-fixated, wife-beating monster. Not even his children were safe. An early scene shows the comedian's young son accidentally scratch his father's new Jag. Peter's petulant response is to stomp, Godzilla-like, over his toys. Later, having propelled first wife Anne (Emily Watson) into another man's arms, he trashes their London flat and threatens to leap off the balcony. (Given his public lusting after Sophia Loren, it's a wonder she doesn't push him.)

Sellers is not the first biopic to equate genius on camera with mania off it. But where it differs from the norm is to use its subject's shape-shifting as a window into his turbulent soul. "I do not know who or what I am," the star once claimed, and the director takes him at his word: this Sellers is a hollow shell who only comes alive when wearing a mask.

A revealing-if-tricksy glimpse behind the Sellers legend, elevated by an Oscar-worthy Geoffrey Rush. Colourful supporting turns, too.

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