Dopo la prima guerra mondiale, quattro donne inglesi, sconosciute tra loro, non sono felici della loro vita. Ma il destino dà loro l'opportunità indimenticabile di fare una vacanza insieme i... Leggi tuttoDopo la prima guerra mondiale, quattro donne inglesi, sconosciute tra loro, non sono felici della loro vita. Ma il destino dà loro l'opportunità indimenticabile di fare una vacanza insieme in una bellissima villa italiana.Dopo la prima guerra mondiale, quattro donne inglesi, sconosciute tra loro, non sono felici della loro vita. Ma il destino dà loro l'opportunità indimenticabile di fare una vacanza insieme in una bellissima villa italiana.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 3 Oscar
- 4 vittorie e 9 candidature totali
- Party Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Two women decide to pool their resources in answer to an ad for a month's rental of a villa in Italy. Due to financial circumstances, two other women join them. Two have humdrum marital lives; one is an elderly woman who prefers to live in the past; the fourth is a wealthy and beautiful woman wholly jaded by life.
As the spell of the villa permeates their spirits, each grows in her own way and is uplifted in her outlook. This also changes the people in their lives who have visited them. As they leave you know the magic of the villa will remain with them...and you will find your outlook altered, for the better. A delightfully uplifting movie!
It is fairly rare for me to watch a film of a book with which I am already familiar. In many cases I find this takes some of the pleasure away from watching the film, but here there is such a strong visual appeal in the setting that I actually found my pleasure augmented by the anticipation of seeing the next segment of the book, effectively unrolled before my eyes. (Perhaps Italy itself has some part in this, the last time I had this experience was when I was watching tales from Boccaccio's Decameron on TV.) Generally films of books tend to increase the dramatic level of the original work to ensure that the filmed version has an even wider appeal, but here if anything it is reduced in order to keep the viewers attention on the gradual character development rather than on any background events. This works very well, although changes from the book are few and basically the film remains true to the original story. Great credit is due to the Director, Mike Newell, and all members of the cast, particularly those well known British Actresses who play the four principal ladies.
Lotty (Josie Lawrence) discovers an ad in the newspaper announcing an Italian castle available to let for the month of April. She implores her neighbor, Rose (Miranda Richardson), to invest in the trip so that together they might find happiness. Lawrence and Richardson beautifully portray compliant wives who are defined by their husbands, homes and obligations. Their body language and speech are so repressed at the beginning of the film. I found myself thinking that one or both of them will crack if they do not find peace.
To defray the cost of the trip, Lotty and Rose invite two other women to share in the villa rental, an elderly matron (Joan Plowright) and a titled socialite (Polly Walker). Interestingly, both Mrs. Fisher and Lady Caroline are very fragile, lonely women who have known great loss and mask their pain with cold exteriors. One is trapped by her past while the other is trapped by her beauty. Plowright shines as the brusque outer layers peel away and we discover her heart.
While each actress portrays a traditional female stereotype (Lawrence the daft, eager to please wife, Richardson the puritan, Plowright the hardened dowager, Walker the used up party girl), it does not detract and in fact, includes the viewer as we see something of them in us and vice versa.
For me, the essence of the film occurs when Lotty befriends Mrs. Fisher in a poignant scene. It characterizes the hope that all the women had when they embarked on their journeys. To love and be loved. To be happy with self. To be enchanted by life.
The cast is full of well known British actors and they are brilliant in their roles. I watch this movie when I feel the need to relax and unwind. It is very well directed and tends to follow the book pretty closely, which is unusual for a director. The scenery and the script are both delightful. I recommend this movie to anyone who wants to escape from reality, even if only for a short period of time. When ever I play this film, I can almost imagine being in Italy with the smell of flowers and feel the sunshine. Four stars****
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen she was cast as Mrs. Fisher, Dame Joan Plowright said that about twenty years earlier she and Dame Maggie Smith had planned an adaption of the same novel in which they would play the parts of Lotty Wilkins and Rose Arbuthnot.
- BlooperRose selects a spray of pink flowers from a vase to place in her hair. When she puts the flowers back into the vase, the straight plastic stem reveals them to be artificial.
- Citazioni
Lotty: Did you know Keats?
Mrs. Fisher: Keats! No I didn't, and I didn't know Shakespeare or Chaucer either.
- ConnessioniEdited into Screen Two: Enchanted April (1992)
- Colonne sonoreRap
Written by Jean-Jacques Beineix
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- Enchanted April
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Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 13.200.170 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 73.041 USD
- 2 ago 1992
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 13.200.170 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 35min(95 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1