Alla fine del 1800 in Inghilterra, Jude progetta di andare in città e frequentare l'università, ma si sposa presto e diventa uno scalpellino. Quando la moglie se ne va, si trasferisce in cit... Leggi tuttoAlla fine del 1800 in Inghilterra, Jude progetta di andare in città e frequentare l'università, ma si sposa presto e diventa uno scalpellino. Quando la moglie se ne va, si trasferisce in città, dove fa amicizia con la cugina liberale Sue.Alla fine del 1800 in Inghilterra, Jude progetta di andare in città e frequentare l'università, ma si sposa presto e diventa uno scalpellino. Quando la moglie se ne va, si trasferisce in città, dove fa amicizia con la cugina liberale Sue.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 5 vittorie e 7 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
now i found this movie to be amazing. the story was very much true to hardy's novel (well up until the end) and while the film is dark it is wonderfully so. it is not a lighthearted period romance but rather a study on human behavior and how it can go terribly wrong when the heart becomes involved. it is obvious that they love each other, and the fact they are cousins is secondary... they had never known each other as children as most children know their cousins. they met as adults and fell in love as such. their story is an impassioned one of trail and error romances, exploring ones desires and drives, the burden of nonconformity, and what can cause as love to break down.
very good, very powerful, but a very abrupt ending with one of the best closing lines. ****/*****
Jude Fawley is a self-educated stonemason looking to enter the hallowed halls of (a thinly-disguised) Oxford. Class and snobbery combine to crush that dream, but he fights and wins his other dream, to secure the love of his cousin Sue. Headstrong and independent, a prototype Suffragette, she will face her own stern test and be found wanting.
Christopher Eccleston inhabits the character fully. The scene in the pub where he recites the Lord's Creed in Latin, then challenges the undergrads to judge if he got it right, is painful and poignant. Winslet is stunning as the admirable but infuriating Sue Brideshead whose choices in life are oblique but all-too-real. A cold draft of air oozes from her expression every time she shuns Jude. There isn't a missed beat in Winslet's portrayal of a woman who goes from supremely confident to utterly lost.
Winterbottom would go on to tinker and experiment, unsuccessfully, with Hardy's Mayor of Casterbridge in The Claim. Here, he keeps it strictly BBC, evoking the early industrial age magnificently in his cobbled streets and fog-shrouded spires. An array of British acting talent fill out the supporting roles superbly, most notably Liam Cunningham as the put-upon Phillotson, and Rachel Griffiths as pig-hugging Arabella, whose rising fortune sways in counter-point to Jude's slow, inexorable decline. In one scene where she encounters her estranged son at a fairground, the interaction between woman and child is both naturalistic and magical. The expression on the face of Little Jude's sister is priceless. Perhaps a happy accident, perhaps genius from the director, but all the more tragic for what follows.
One of the most ill-fated couples in British literature are vividly brought to life in this film, designed to satisfy fans of the novel. Hardy, one feels, would approve.
I haven't read the book, but one senses from the film that it may represent a fierce attack on then-contemporary values, particularly those involving marriage, values which drive the characters to their ultimate misfortune. One senses this, but in the movie this theme is played down, so the story seems merely to tell of the ups and downs of Jude's life, presented as fairly accidental happenings. A terrible tragedy eventually occurs; and, because of what has happened in the past, a second, avoidable, tragedy then follows. The problem, dramatically speaking, is that the second tragedy appears smaller than the first, thus the end of the film serves as an anti-climax. Without a unifying sense of accusation, we, instead of a powerful polemic, are left with only the tale of an unfortunate.
'Jude' is one of the better, and the least sentimental, of historical films. But something of the point has been lost in translation.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSome press reports stated that the pig which Arabella kills and guts was a real pig being killed and gutted for real. This has been denied by Rachel Griffiths who insists she was given the carcass of a dead animal to portray the scene.
- Citazioni
[last lines]
Jude Fawley: We are man and wife, if ever two people were on this earth.
- Colonne sonoreTe Laudamus (Second Service)
Composer Orlando Gibbons
Performed by New College Choir Oxford (as The Choir of New College Oxford)
Director Edward Higginbottom
(c) 1988 CRD Records Ltd
I più visti
- How long is Jude?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 7.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 409.144 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 31.850 USD
- 20 ott 1996
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 409.144 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 3min(123 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1