Madame Bovary
- Filme para televisão
- 2000
- 3 h
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA young woman in her late teens, a reader of novels and with high hopes of romance and passion, marries a widowed country doctor. Although he dotes on her, she is soon bored and discontent. ... Ler tudoA young woman in her late teens, a reader of novels and with high hopes of romance and passion, marries a widowed country doctor. Although he dotes on her, she is soon bored and discontent. First, she gives her imagination to a law student in town, and next she takes a lover. Whe... Ler tudoA young woman in her late teens, a reader of novels and with high hopes of romance and passion, marries a widowed country doctor. Although he dotes on her, she is soon bored and discontent. First, she gives her imagination to a law student in town, and next she takes a lover. When he refuses to run away with her, she takes up again with the law clerk. Her spending on ... Ler tudo
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Indicado para 2 prêmios BAFTA
- 3 indicações no total
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
It takes some doing to make a woman as misguided and blinkered as Emma Bovary truly sympathetic (one of my major problems with the book), and though Frances O'Connor is a good actress, she often comes across seeming merely like a spoiled brat. She seems even more so because the decision was made to have her speak out loud so many things that Emma only thinks in the book. But I think the negative impression I got of this Emma is less due to her, perhaps, then to the other cast. I think it was a major mistake to cast somebody so obviously manly and sympathetic in the role of her husband as Hugh Bonneville (in the book Charles was really a dork) and such lightweights as Greg Wise (who looks stupefied most of the time) and -- well, I've forgotten what is name was -- as Leon. You definitely have to question her preference from them over Charles.
The various explicit nude sex scenes really add nothing, and often lead us in the wrong direction. Is it merely a difference in sexual technique that makes Emma unsatisified by her husband, but satisfied by Rodolphe? You can look at these scenes for hours and never find out. By the way, what is this about Emma apparently liking rough sex (her first time with Rodolphe, when he makes her bleed). Where was THAT in the book??! But most of all it was a mistake, I think, because Emma focuses as much on romance as on sex, and these scenes completely miss that.
I was mainly disappointed in this try at the book. Beautifully photographed, though.
Of course the movie omits many details of the original story. Yet the actors who perform the personages of Bovary, Homais, Lheureux and many minor roles are cast well. However, Frances O'Connor is not a credible Madame Bovary. I think it is difficult to find a actress for this complicated character. I could not help imagining that Emma Thompson might have been a much more sympathetic and understandable Emma Bovary.
Yet I think the BBC deserves a 7 out of 10 for this attempt to represent Flaubert's masterpiece.
Anyway . . .
As far as direction, casting, & most of the production - considering it's a period piece -this movie is done pretty well, Probably worth a solid 8 for those basic things.
Unfortunately, I give it a 2 because it is totally lacked rating, and seemed to be pigeon-holed into being really only about a dissatisfied, immature woman who fulfills her lusts. True enough, in essence that IS what the story is about. This movie adaptation did try to delve more into the internal dynamics of the main character if indeed that was the intention, but this internal narration was shallow & repetitive.
I've never read the book, but we all know that usually the movie is by necessity, as well as often uneccesarily, very lacking and/or critically changing the authors real intent. This is the second version of this movie I've seen, and tho somewhat better done than the other in some ways, I still would not have bought this (Amazon) DVD if it had shown an R rating.
This was a TV movie - so I assumed it was PG-13. Apparently the explicit scenes were cut from the TV version, because I did not see the most explicit scene listed in the parents guide.
(however, I have since posted it) Typically, usually, 'made for TV' movies are PG-13. The DVD cover has no rating either, I suppose because it is a BBC film . . .?
However, it is definitely an R movie, not only for obvious reasons but thematically as well, not for the kiddies. And in my opinion, also unecessarily over-indulgent and condescending in its explicity for adults.
The story here, if forced to be explained concisely-in a nutshell-very basically, is about a particular woman with a sexual addiction.
Some of the movie is told - randomly - thru Emma's internal thoughts as we watch her move thru life discontented at every turn. Her attention to morality appears to be nothing more than a pretense: she's actually coy, using a 'front of morality' as a challenge to her pursuers to chase & break her, which doesn't take much, due to her immaturity.
One could possibly say that the two main points of the film seem to highlight the disgust, jaded views, or some motivation of the author and/or the movie maker to portray as follows; First the weak man; The doctor, somewhat weak minded, acquiescing sort of man, still under his mothers thumb, always diplomatically trying to please his mother & wife. Simply a mostly passive, insecure, whipped guy, tries hard to be non-confrontational, will excuse anything to try to get along. Possibly has some sexual repression and/or disfunction as we are shown Emma quite bewildered on her wedding night. The viewer is left to infer men are fairly easily controlled and led.
Then Emma, the 'tragic' female, who's dissatisfaction is born mostly of immaturity & her own lack of knowledge, as well as her own selfishness. Dissatisfied at every turn, she indulges her lusts (addictions) whether sexually or materially, becoming more unhinged & tyrannical, only rushing faster to her ultimate downfall - the viewer is left to infer the portrayal of women as weak, immature, sexually immoral, self-indulgent, not naturally nurturing, and totally inept at managing anything financially due to all the previously mentioned traits.
Bewteen these two - loss & ruin is inevitable.
Along with all that, there's the portrayal of the rather over-bearing, demanding, vocally opinionated mother-in-law, trying to control this obvious disastrous, impending ruin.
Overall, what is portrayed is a peter-pan-syndrome husband that symbiotically fit perfect with a wife's tinker-bell magical-thinking-immaturity; Emma and her husband are a perfect match - for all the wrong reasons.
At least the mother-in-law finally lets go of her reigns, wisely bowing out before more events culminate in the family doomsday onthe horizon.
The most entertaining character was Emma's charming, sweet, & cute old father.
But all the actors played their parts well.
One interesting thing, although it may or may not have been intended - is the relevance of a different era then, today, and all the decades between as it adequately portrays the lives of an addict and a co-dependent.
Emma is basically a sex & material-things addict. She indulges all her lusts, which overrides her responsibilities as a wife and mother, and even as a daughter, and these things brought herself, husband, & child to ruin as well.
We see the doctor-husband being the epitome of co-dependency, constantly excusing, in denial (turning a 'blind eye'), and trying to fix, hide, cover up, etc.
Under that lens, the movie is relevant across all eras of history regarding addiction, co-dependency, and enabling.
Just about everyone has some level of familiarity with these dynamics which seem to occur more & more often in so many families via prescription or street drug addictions, addiction to food, sex, and many other kinds of addictions.
The story while not as complete as one would like is at least coherent and has much darkness, pathos and irony. The characters are more complex in the book certainly but they are equally so to pull off on screen because most you don't feel much sympathy for and it is easy to make Emma too bitchy or too sympathetic. But there is eye for characterisation here, Emma and Charles are different and Marie Louise can come across as a caricature to some but everybody else is spot on and generally there does seem to be respect for the source material with the knowledge of its adaptation difficulty. The direction is fluid, at times efficient without rushing and at others languid without lacking pulse. The performances are fine. Frances O'Connor takes a noble stab at possibly one of the most difficult literary characters to portray and does so with pathos and vanity, there is definitely a sense of Emma being a rather insufferable person but with O'Connor you can't help feeling some compassion for her. Hugh Bonneville is a commanding and comparatively mild-mannered Charles, while Greg Wise captures Rudolphe's eroticism, menace and suavity outstandingly well and Hugh Dancy's Leon is gentle without being dull. In support, standouts were the sly L'Hereux of Keith Baron and Eileen Atkins' Marie Louise, who steals her scenes although their roles are not exactly big. All in all, has many great things and a few things that definitely could have been done better, a respectable if comparatively underwhelming adaptation. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis movie was released on DVD in 2012 with a running time of two hours and thirty-eight minutes.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe power of attorney document had already begun to smolder before Emma grabbed it back out of the fire, so it could not have been crisp and flat and an undamaged white color when Charles was holding it a moment later and refused to burn it himself.
- ConexõesFeatured in The 58th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2001 (2001)
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