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The Heart of Me

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Helena Bonham Carter, Paul Bettany, and Olivia Williams in The Heart of Me (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Sundance Channel
Play trailer2:15
1 Video
36 Photos
TragedyTragic RomanceDramaRomance

1930's London. Two sisters - Madeleine and Dinah - One marries Rickie, the other falls in love with him. He begins an affair which is to have repercussions throughout their lives.1930's London. Two sisters - Madeleine and Dinah - One marries Rickie, the other falls in love with him. He begins an affair which is to have repercussions throughout their lives.1930's London. Two sisters - Madeleine and Dinah - One marries Rickie, the other falls in love with him. He begins an affair which is to have repercussions throughout their lives.

  • Director
    • Thaddeus O'Sullivan
  • Writers
    • Rosamond Lehmann
    • Lucinda Coxon
  • Stars
    • Helena Bonham Carter
    • Olivia Williams
    • Paul Bettany
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Thaddeus O'Sullivan
    • Writers
      • Rosamond Lehmann
      • Lucinda Coxon
    • Stars
      • Helena Bonham Carter
      • Olivia Williams
      • Paul Bettany
    • 29User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    The Heart of Me
    Trailer 2:15
    The Heart of Me

    Photos36

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Helena Bonham Carter
    Helena Bonham Carter
    • Dinah
    Olivia Williams
    Olivia Williams
    • Madeleine
    Paul Bettany
    Paul Bettany
    • Rickie
    Eleanor Bron
    Eleanor Bron
    • Mrs. Burkett
    Luke Newberry
    Luke Newberry
    • Anthony
    Tom Ward
    Tom Ward
    • Jack
    Gillian Hanna
    Gillian Hanna
    • Betty
    Andrew Havill
    Andrew Havill
    • Charles
    Alison Reid
    • Bridie
    Katy Maw
    • Sylvia
    • (as Kathryn Tennant-Maw)
    Rebecca Charles
    • Miss Matthews
    John Rowe
    John Rowe
    • Drysdale
    Shaughan Seymour
    • Jeweller
    Simon Day
    • Hospital Doctor
    Jenny Howe
    • Nurse
    Rosie Ede
    Rosie Ede
    • Landlady
    Rosie Bonham Carter
    • Clarissa
    Paul Ridley
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Thaddeus O'Sullivan
    • Writers
      • Rosamond Lehmann
      • Lucinda Coxon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    6.52.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7olly1508

    A moving and beautifully acted piece of real cinema

    This film played to a packed audience at the closing night of the London Film Festival last week. The story of an upper class English man falling passionately in love with his wife's sister was so involving I completely forgot myself for the duration of the film (and from what I could see,so did the rest of the audience). It is a flawless film. Intensely moving. The complex characterisations were handled with immense integrity. One of the wonderful things about it was that during the course of the story I both liked and disliked all the characters. By the end it is impossible to judge them, only appreciate what they had gone through. A most wonderful and uplifting film. Paul Bettany is a discovery. An actor of immense subtlety who is not afraid to play a character who appears simply weak on the surface but is actually very complex. A very detailed and brave performance. Olivia Williams is transformed by the character. She plays Madeline, a woman who lives by the strict rules of her class. No emotion is allowed to get in the way of how this class organises their lives and Madeline respects that. When we see her years later in life, Williams makes us utterly believe the immense changes that she has endured. Madeline must forgive her sister Dinah for her betrayal. This seems impossible given what Madeline has endured at the hands of her sister, yet Williams makes us believe in that forgiveness. This was a great lesson to me. To see how you must move on in your life. Helena Bonham Carter is more vulnerable, sensitive and outrageous than I have ever seen her. Her character is on a knife edge. She falls passionately in love with her brother- in- law and from that moment on the film takes you on an emotional roller-coaster ride that I still can't get out of my mind. The film also has one of the best scores I've heard in ages - romantic and tuneful without being slushy or sentimental. It's also a ravishing looking film (maybe that's why I cant get it out of my mind) and yet the powerful images never interfere with the story but add to it all the time. Real cinema.
    8lawprof

    The BBC Agains Shows Why There'll Always be an England (on celluloid)

    I've heard that Western religious dogma eschews the thought never mind the act of a man lusting for his neighbor's wife. What really rocks the boat is a married man sappily and hopelessly enmeshed in the arms of his wife's sister. And that's what we have in this dark hued English drama whose scenes alternate between the pre-war social frivolity of affluent men and women unaware that their time was almost up and postwar scenes tieing the story together.

    Helena Bonham Carter is Dinah, a free spirit given to studying, and perhaps evangelizing, the gospel of malcontents and revolutionaries in that nonthreatening and oddly endearing manner that insures both bemusement and acceptance by well-to-do English gentlefolk. Olivia Williams is her married sister, Madeleine, a hostess with the mostess, married to businessman Rickie, played by Paul Bettany.

    The focus of the film is on this trio, not a menage a trois but a coruscating set of characters wracked by love, lust and confusion leavened by sporadic betrayal and reconciliation.

    It's really simple: Rickie sort of loves or at least very much likes Madeleine but his heart and other body parts desperately seek and need Dinah. Dinah loves her sister and her charming adolescent son but she must have Rickie. Madeleine loves both but is blind to the reality of their relationship until... A story of this genre must have a clear and unambiguous "until."

    Directed by Thaddeus O'Sullivan, the acting of the three principals is, simply, mesmerizingly superb. Helena Bonham Carter is renowned for her period pieces (she can do much more and she does) and she fits into London's prewar world and its gray aftermath as if she actually experienced those times. Paul Bettany captures the lost male guided by his...ah, lust, with but minimal if any moral insight into his conduct. Special mention must be made of Olivia Williams who captures the pathos, hope and desperation of a decent woman swept up by acts of betrayal she never envisaged as possible. I hope we see much more of this fine actress.

    The score by Nicholas Hooper is very good but judicious editing was needed to reduce intrusiveness of the music and the sound level ought to have been lowered for a number of scenes.

    A fine production.

    8/10.
    Buddy-51

    Brilliantly acted drama

    `The Heart of Me' is pure, unadulterated soap opera redeemed by the kind of high-toned, stiff-upper-lip seriousness of which the British seem uniquely capable. Set primarily in the 1930's, the film tells the story of two sisters caught in a passionate and quasi-incestuous love triangle. Madeline (Olivia Williams), the older of the two, is an uptight woman whose weak-willed husband, Rickie (Paul Bettany), falls in love with her younger and more free-spirited sibling, Dinah (Helena Bonham Carter). These two in-laws, soul mates for life, carry on a torrid love affair until Madeline discovers the truth – and even for a time thereafter.

    Given the material, `The Heart of Me' could easily have devolved into a cheap, sensationalistic melodrama for the `Masterpiece Theatre' set. Instead, thanks to truly brilliant performances by the three principal actors and an intelligent, thoughtful screenplay, the film becomes a wholly absorbing drama that offers profound insights into the realities of the human heart. The pain each of these people experiences is so palpable in its intensity that it washes away all traces of artificiality and contrivance. The film becomes a fascinating study of what happens when clanging passions are hemmed in by the restrictions and proprieties of a strict, morally repressive upper class society. Rickie and Dinah choose to turn themselves into social pariahs, then must face the consequences of their convention-defying actions. Of most interest is the emotionally complex relationship between the two very different sisters. What makes the film special is the way in which it allows the seemingly cold-hearted Madeline to become as much a sympathetic figure as the two impassioned lovers. Thanks to Williams' impeccable performance (she played Penelope in the TV movie version of `The Odyssey'), Madeline is allowed to live and breathe and have her own say, making her, in many ways, the most intriguing of the three main characters.

    `The Heart of Me,' which is beautifully detailed in costumes and settings, transcends the limits of its genre to deliver a heartbreaking tale of love, loss, lament - and hope.
    8jotix100

    Betrayal

    This exquisitely crafted film is much better than what we have heard it was. The film has an incredible texture, but of course, it's not for everyone. Director Thaddeus O'Sullivan presents this story of love and betrayal with a style that is surprising. The material in which this film is based is the novel by Rosamond Lehmann, that shows a slice of the life in London among the upper classes in the 30s, prior to WWII and adapted for the screen by Lucinda Coxon.

    The story of this love triangle involves Madeleine, a young society matron, married to Rickie, a successful bank executive. They entertain lavishly; it's obvious they know the right people, as it shows in their lavish parties. Dinah, Madeleine's sister is a loose cannon. She is a young woman who couldn't care less about being int the right places, or to mix with the right crowd.

    Dinah and Rickie begin an affair. Rickie agonizes about the situation and how to handle it. Madeleine never gets a hint until Rickie reveals his intention of leaving her. Madeleine, without Rickie will lose it all, her status in society and all the other little perks. But she is not prepared to accept the idea that Dinah is the one who has lured Rickie away from her. The relationship among the three principals will never be the same.

    Helena Bonham Carter plays Dinah with abandon. She's a no nonsense actress and she clearly gets into her character's skin. Olivia Williams is a staid and shocked Madeleine. Ms Williams is a beauty that epitomizes the type of English society woman naturally. Paul Bettany is convincing as Rickie, the man torn between love and duty. Eleanor Bron makes an excellent Mrs. Burkett.
    Proud_Canadian

    A wonderful film that goes for substance over style.

    I was fortunate enough to see this film at the Toronto Film Festival and talk briefly with the Director afterwards.

    "The Heart of Me" is a period piece set in London during the 1930s and 40s. It is a European-style film that takes the time to give exposition and background to the characters. It builds slowly and chooses substance over style. The mood is somber and much of the lighting and colour scheme reflects this in a similar manner to the Crow.

    It is a drama with a few moments of levity. The three main leads are excellent. Helena Bonham Carter and Olivia Williams play sisters. Helena's character begins to fall in love with her brother-in-law played by Paul Bettany and they have an affair.

    I was pleasantly surprised by Paul's acting. I've only seen him before in "A Knight's Tale" and "A Beautiful Mind" where he has played light-hearted best friend characters. His performance here was understated, subdued, and a change of pace from what I had previously seen. I didn't think he was capable of going head to head with Helena but he was.

    If you like Merchant and Ivory films, then I think you would like this. It has the same feel as "Howard's End" and "Remains of the Day".

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    Related interests

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    Tragedy
    Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in Le secret de Brokeback Mountain (2005)
    Tragic Romance
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The poem read by Dinah (Helena Bonham Carter) in the park is Broken Love, written by William Blake.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Dinah: And throughout all Eternity I forgive you, you forgive me

    • Crazy credits
      Thanks to the residents of Fitzroy Square.
    • Soundtracks
      The Very Thought of You
      Written by Ray Noble

      Performed by Al Bowlly with Ray Noble and His Orchestra

      Published by Campbell Connelly & Co., Ltd.

      By arrangement with Past Perfect Vintage Music

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 2, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Benim Kalbim
    • Filming locations
      • Isle of Man
    • Production companies
      • Martin Pope Productions
      • Arch Enterprises Limited
      • BBC Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $7,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $196,067
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $21,956
      • Jun 15, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $282,519
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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