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Portrait of a Lady

Originaltitel: The Portrait of a Lady
  • 1996
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 24 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
13.302
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nicole Kidman in Portrait of a Lady (1996)
Trailer for Portrait of a Lady
trailer wiedergeben2:11
2 Videos
99 Fotos
Zeitraum: DramaDramaRomanze

Ein Mädchen erbt ein Vermögen und gerät in eine fehlgeleitete Beziehung mit einem Gentleman, dessen wahre Natur, einschließlich einer widerhakigen und begehrlichen Veranlagung, ihr Leben in ... Alles lesenEin Mädchen erbt ein Vermögen und gerät in eine fehlgeleitete Beziehung mit einem Gentleman, dessen wahre Natur, einschließlich einer widerhakigen und begehrlichen Veranlagung, ihr Leben in einen Alptraum verwandelt.Ein Mädchen erbt ein Vermögen und gerät in eine fehlgeleitete Beziehung mit einem Gentleman, dessen wahre Natur, einschließlich einer widerhakigen und begehrlichen Veranlagung, ihr Leben in einen Alptraum verwandelt.

  • Regie
    • Jane Campion
  • Drehbuch
    • Henry James
    • Laura Jones
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Nicole Kidman
    • John Malkovich
    • Barbara Hershey
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    13.302
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jane Campion
    • Drehbuch
      • Henry James
      • Laura Jones
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Nicole Kidman
      • John Malkovich
      • Barbara Hershey
    • 79Benutzerrezensionen
    • 49Kritische Rezensionen
    • 60Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 5 Gewinne & 15 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    The Portrait of a Lady: Blu-Ray (Special Edition)
    Trailer 2:11
    The Portrait of a Lady: Blu-Ray (Special Edition)
    The Portrait of a Lady
    Trailer 2:20
    The Portrait of a Lady
    The Portrait of a Lady
    Trailer 2:20
    The Portrait of a Lady

    Fotos99

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    Topbesetzung26

    Ändern
    Nicole Kidman
    Nicole Kidman
    • Isabel Archer
    John Malkovich
    John Malkovich
    • Gilbert Osmond
    Barbara Hershey
    Barbara Hershey
    • Madame Serena Merle
    Martin Donovan
    Martin Donovan
    • Ralph Touchett
    Mary-Louise Parker
    Mary-Louise Parker
    • Henrietta Stackpole
    Shelley Winters
    Shelley Winters
    • Mrs. Touchett
    Richard E. Grant
    Richard E. Grant
    • Lord Warburton
    Shelley Duvall
    Shelley Duvall
    • Countess Gemini
    Christian Bale
    Christian Bale
    • Edward Rosier
    Viggo Mortensen
    Viggo Mortensen
    • Caspar Goodwood
    Valentina Cervi
    Valentina Cervi
    • Pansy Osmond
    John Gielgud
    John Gielgud
    • Mr. Touchett
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    • Bob Bantling
    Catherine Zago
    • Mother Superior
    Alessandra Vanzi
    • Nun #2
    Amy Lindsay
    Amy Lindsay
    • Miss Molyneux #1
    • (as Katie Campbell)
    Katherine Anne Porter
    • Miss Molyneux #2
    Eddy Seager
    • Strongman's Spruiker
    • Regie
      • Jane Campion
    • Drehbuch
      • Henry James
      • Laura Jones
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen79

    6,213.3K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    tedg

    Incomplete Portrait

    I vacillate between preferring films that do a simple thing extremely well (Muppet Movie) or those that shoot high and fail. This film is the latter.

    Campion has allied her aspirations with `women's' perspectives; honorable and rich enough. And she selects material ripe with possibilities. Clearly she has a vision, presumably extracted from the author's, but she fails to get on top of it.

    Part of the problem is the simplification of the book for the screenplay. We just don't get enough foundation for the travesty of person we witness. A large part of the problem is Ms Kidman. She simply doesn't have the depth to pull this off, though she wears the clothes well. We never really see her supposed extraordinary spirit, and never really see how she's trapped by that very same spirit. Malkovich doesn't help. Here, he's too one-dimensionally a schemer.

    Campion knows better than to throw in so many irrelevant film-school angles as a substitute for narrative reflection. This film is worth seeing as a study in how a spirited film maker is seduced by that very spirit into the superficialities of style, so is trapped. The ambiguous ending is, I think, Campion's limbo. Let's hope she escapes for her sake as well as ours. We need that spirit.
    SKG-2

    Misses the mark, but shouldn't be entirely dismissed

    When I read DAISY MILLER in high school and was completely unengaged, that set me off the wrong foot with Henry James. I also dislike his over-attentiveness to detail, and I must confess a prejudice against any writer who says in 10 pages what they could just have easily said in 2. Yet THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY, once you get into it, turns out to be quite a powerful novel, and given how much I loved THE PIANO, I was really looking forward to what Jane Campion could bring to it. Rarely have I seen a movie version, though, which is so far off the mark but still has worthy parts to it.

    Let's start with the mistakes. Campion claimed she was re-imagining the story of Isabel Archer, an American woman of character but not of means, who eventually marries unhappily, instead of just giving a straight filmed version. That's all well and good, but what she and writer Laura Jones do is all but gut the motivations behind the story; we don't see Archer's vitality early on, so we have nowhere to go when she falls, and we don't see what draws people to her. And when Madame Merle and Osmond appear, they are so obviously snakes in the grass that we think Archer is a fool for trusting them, instead of feeling empathy for her. It doesn't help that Malkovich is so obviously bored here he does nothing to exude any charm. Hershey comes off better, but what's done with her character is a little strange as well.

    Nevertheless, this movie can't be easily dismissed. First of all, Campion's gift for imagery still comes through; she visually expresses the passions lying hidden in the novel, which few directors do when adapting period pieces. Also, Kidman grows more confident as the movie wears on, so we do get a sense of Isabel. But as someone already commented, the most worthy element here is Martin Donovan as Ralph, Isabel's sickly cousin in love with her, and whose advice sets the whole story in motion. He doesn't play for sentiment, but earns it instead. The ending also keeps its power. Still, this is quite a missed opportunity for Campion.
    6JamesHitchcock

    Stuck in Mid=Pacific

    Henry James has never struck me as being the most cinematic of authors; his novels generally involve detailed explorations of the psychology of his characters and are marked by a highly elaborate prose style, characterised by lengthy, complex sentences and Latinate vocabulary. Yet a number of films have been based on his works, some of them very successful, dating back to "The Lost Moment" (based on "The Aspern Papers") and "The Heiress" (based on "Washington Square") in the late forties. The Merchant-Ivory team made three film adaptations of his novels, "The Europeans", "The Bostonians" and "The Golden Bowl".

    Like many of James's novels, "The Portrait of a Lady" is set among American expatriates in Europe. The central character, Isabel Archer, is a young American woman who becomes financially independent after she inherits a large amount of money from her English uncle Mr Touchett. While travelling on the Continent she meets another American expatriate, Gilbert Osmond, in Florence. The two marry, but the marriage is not a happy one, and Isabel comes to suspect that Osmond is a fortune-hunter whose only interest in her is financial.

    The film is made in the "heritage cinema" style, popular in the eighties and nineties, and is reminiscent of the work of Merchant-Ivory and of certain other films of the period, such as Martin Scorsese's "The Age of Innocence" and Terence Davies's "The House of Mirth". Films in this style are generally set in the nineteenth or early twentieth century among the well-to-do classes, are generally based upon a literary source and are characterised by a detailed recreation of the look of the period and by an emphasis on dialogue and character development rather than physical action.

    Nicole Kidman's acting career got off to a promising start with films like "Dead Calm" and "Flirting", but over the next ten years or so she seemed to get stuck in something of a rut, appearing in far too many dull or second-rate films like "Far and Away", "Batman Forever", "Practical Magic" and the dreadful "Moulin Rouge". "The Portrait of a Lady" is considerably better than any of those films, but Kidman's performance is not her best, and her accent is not always reliable. It has become commonplace to describe American actors unsuccessfully attempting a British accent (or vice-versa) as being stuck in mid- Atlantic. Kidman's Aussie-tinged American accent is probably the first example of a major stat being linguistically stuck in mid-Pacific.

    John Malkovich is a lot better; like his Valmont in another period drama, "Dangerous Liaisons" his Osmond is the sort of character he excels at playing, able to combine an icy reptilian coldness with a certain smooth and plausible charm. There are also good contributions from Barbara Hershey as Osmond's friend and co-conspirator Madame Merle and from John Gielgud in a cameo as the elderly Touchett. (Gielgud was 92 at the time, and this was far from being his last film; he was to continue working up until his death in 2000 at the age of 96).

    Although Henry James was a dramatist as well as a novelist, and adapted several of his books for the stage, he considered "The Portrait of a Lady" to be unsuitable for dramatic presentation and dissuaded a friend who wanted to turn it into a play. That, however, did not dissuade Jane Campion from attempting to film the novel. Having recently watched the film for the first time since seeing it in the cinema in 1996, I can say that, in my view, James was probably right. It is, like many examples of "heritage cinema", visually attractive, but it is also rather emotionally cold and too slow-moving. There is nothing much about it which remains in the mind for long afterwards. It does not really compare with the greatest heritage movies like "The Age of Innocence", "The House of Mirth" or the best examples of Merchant-Ivory's work such as "Howard's End". Or, for that matter, with Jane Campion's own earlier, more dramatic and passionate period drama, "The Piano". 6/10
    KentRandell

    Why?

    How can Henry James' novella "Turn Of The Screw" swallow me in whole while I find his other work wordy and arrogant? And how can the same director that has made the two most boring movies I have ever seen, "Two Friends" and this one, also be the same person behind "Sweetie" and "Holy Smoke" - the two finest examples of a movie drawing real characters in real places I have ever seen? This film left me in a state of semi-paralysis.

    Being a fan of slow-paced, foreign, and period piece movies, I was pretty surprised at how much this movie bored me. I'm writing this review to try to sort out my feelings of bewilderment.

    I think one problem is the use of John Malkovich. We've seen him soar to great heights in the paradoxical "Being John Malkovich" and "The Glass Menagerie", but here his monotone is overly droll and predictable, almost as if he is playing off himself in a Saturday Night Live sketch. In fact the most enjoyable part of this movie was the scene where Mr. Malkovich twirls the umbrella in an ambiguously literal attempt to hypnotize Isabel. If only there were more of these elements in the film....

    Then there's Nicole Kidman, whose underachieving attempts at acting has managed to ruin films by not one but two of the greats: Ms. Campion and Stanley Kubrick. Her delivery was similar to Gwyneth Paltrow's in "Mr. Ripley" -- obviously lost. She's just another pretty face thrown into a role of substance after receiving excessive amounts of hype. Watching them act gives me the same feeling I get watching the members of Milli Vanilli try to sing. In their element, they can be undeniably sexy or cute, but in deeper roles the viewer is left completely clueless to their characters' motives. Is Isabel supposed to be docile, alluring, witty, in-control, charismatic, or not-in-control? We can't tell.

    In this mess, Barbara Hershey and Martin Donovan as the sickly cousin were both very good. But alongside the weak link Kidman there was little they could do. And Campion made some extremely unusual stylistic sidetracks, the very sidetracks that work in the Holy Smoke India scenes. But in a period piece the fading dream suitors, inexplicable intro, and Chaplin filters seemed inappropriate, although one has to admire her for trying. Even when I don't agree with her methods I respect her sense of adventure (but let's face it, I'll love her forever because of Sweetie). With a little more humility from Campion, a different Isabel, and a more invigorated Malkovich this film might have worked.

    For a good treatment of James, try to scare up a copy of the 1961 film The Innocents.
    7hommedeplume

    A woman is torn between independence and love in this feminist adaptation of Henry James' novel.

    Many people could not warm up to this remarkable adaptation of Henry James' novel, A Portrait of a Lady. The dark, abusive themes and open ending are not part of typical costume drama fare, but both are true to Henry James' novel and to Jane Campion's vision.

    Henry James originally wrote the novel in the 1880s. Intended as an exploration of what a woman might do if she were given independent means, James' book indicts women as being trapped by a weaker nature. Exploring the same material Campion's movie comes to a different conclusion.

    The adaptation and direction are superb. The movie maintains the steady rhythm of doom that makes James' novel an enduring classic. There is no place where this is more evident in the film than in its lingering images. The camera holds on to the subject a moment longer than expected, making the viewer a little uncomfortable, and anticipating sudden disaster that never quite arrives. Ms. Campion directs this film like a horror film, which is exactly what it is.

    The acting in this film is also convincing, from Nicole Kidman's paralyzed Isabel, to John Malkovich as a hypnotically terrifying pursuer. They are backed by a solid cast of major actors in minor roles, all adding to Isabel's complex societal tragedy.

    Portrait of a Lady, particularly this film adaptation, is a remarkable example of how stories may stay the same, but their meanings change over time.

    Related films include: Washington Square (1997), The House of Mirth (2000), The Buccaneers (1995)(mini).

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      First collaboration between director Dame Jane Campion and Nicole Kidman. However, it was Campion who discovered Kidman, where she, at the age of fourteen, was performing at Australian Theater for Young People and subsequently caught the eye of Campion.
    • Patzer
      (at around 47 mins) A horse carriage is passing through the shot from right to left. The crew with dolly-cam and equipment is clearly visible.
    • Zitate

      Ralph Touchett: I love you but without hope.

    • Crazy Credits
      Jane Campion thanks her family, Colin, Alice and Richard, for their generous support, suggestions and encouragement during the making of this film.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Michael/Mother/The People vs. Larry Flynt/The Evening Star/The Portrait of a Lady/I'm Not Rappaport (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Impromptu in A Flat Major, Op 90 No. 4, D899
      (1828)

      Composed by Franz Schubert

      Adapted for screen by Brian Lock

      Performed by Jean-Yves Thibaudet (as Jean Yves Thibaudet)

      Courtesy of Decca Records Company Ltd.

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. Januar 1997 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Italienisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Portrait of a Lady
    • Drehorte
      • Palazzo Pfanner, Lucca, Tuscany, Italien(Osmond's palace in Florence)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Polygram Filmed Entertainment
      • Propaganda Films
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.692.836 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 107.819 $
      • 29. Dez. 1996
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 3.692.836 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 24 Min.(144 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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