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IMDbPro

The Invisible Woman

  • 2013
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Ralph Fiennes and Felicity Jones in The Invisible Woman (2013)
At the height of his career, Charles Dickens meets a younger woman who becomes his secret lover until his death.
Play trailer2:13
11 Videos
84 Photos
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryRomance

At the height of his career, Charles Dickens meets a younger woman who becomes his secret lover until his death.At the height of his career, Charles Dickens meets a younger woman who becomes his secret lover until his death.At the height of his career, Charles Dickens meets a younger woman who becomes his secret lover until his death.

  • Director
    • Ralph Fiennes
  • Writers
    • Abi Morgan
    • Claire Tomalin
  • Stars
    • Ralph Fiennes
    • Felicity Jones
    • Kristin Scott Thomas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ralph Fiennes
    • Writers
      • Abi Morgan
      • Claire Tomalin
    • Stars
      • Ralph Fiennes
      • Felicity Jones
      • Kristin Scott Thomas
    • 73User reviews
    • 117Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 7 nominations total

    Videos11

    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    International Trailer
    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    U.S. Trailer
    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    U.S. Trailer
    The Invisible Woman: A Profound Secret
    Clip 0:52
    The Invisible Woman: A Profound Secret
    The Invisible Woman: Birthday Gift
    Clip 1:39
    The Invisible Woman: Birthday Gift
    The Invisible Woman: End
    Clip 1:00
    The Invisible Woman: End
    The Invisible Woman: Nelly's Reputation
    Clip 1:07
    The Invisible Woman: Nelly's Reputation

    Photos84

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    + 78
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    Top cast71

    Edit
    Ralph Fiennes
    Ralph Fiennes
    • Charles Dickens
    • (as Mr. Ralph Fiennes)
    Felicity Jones
    Felicity Jones
    • Nelly
    • (as Ms. Felicity Jones)
    Kristin Scott Thomas
    Kristin Scott Thomas
    • Mrs. Frances Ternan
    • (as Ms. Kirstin Scott Thomas)
    Tom Hollander
    Tom Hollander
    • Wilkie Collins
    • (as Mr. Tom Hollander)
    John Kavanagh
    John Kavanagh
    • Rev. William Benham
    • (as Mr. John Kavanagh)
    Tom Attwood
    • Mr. Lambourne
    • (as Mr. Tom Atwood)
    Susanna Hislop
    • Mary
    • (as Ms. Susanna Hislop)
    Tom Burke
    Tom Burke
    • Mr. George Wharton Robinson
    • (as Mr. Tom Burke)
    Tommy Curson-Smith
    • Geoffrey
    • (as Mr. Tommy Curson-Smith)
    David Collings
    David Collings
    • Governor
    • (as Mr. David Collings)
    Michael Marcus
    Michael Marcus
    • Charley Dickens
    • (as Mr. Michael Marcus)
    Perdita Weeks
    Perdita Weeks
    • Maria Ternan
    • (as Ms. Perdita Weeks)
    Richard McCabe
    Richard McCabe
    • Mr. Mark Lemon
    • (as Mr. Richard McCabe)
    Gabriel Vick
    Gabriel Vick
    • Mr. Berger
    • (as Mr. Gabriel Vick)
    Mark Dexter
    Mark Dexter
    • Mr. Augustus Egg
    • (as Mr. Mark Dexter)
    Joseph Paxton
    • Mr. Pigott
    • (as Mr. Joseph Paxton)
    Sophie Russell
    • Miss Ellen Sabine
    • (as Ms. Sophie Russell)
    Christos Lawton
    Christos Lawton
    • Mr. Evans
    • (as Mr. Christos Lawton)
    • Director
      • Ralph Fiennes
    • Writers
      • Abi Morgan
      • Claire Tomalin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews73

    6.110.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7AlsExGal

    Ralph Fiennes as a director

    The titular Invisible Woman is Nelly Ternan, the young woman who became Charles Dickens' (1812-1870) mistress. How this liaison came about was a complete surprise to me and therefore must remain unsaid since it would IMO constitute a spoiler (most folks plow right through spoiler alerts anyway so that won't work). Nelly is played by Felicity Jones and Kristin Scott Thomas plays Nelly's mother, both who are more than competent but who have unspectacular roles.

    It's all Ralph Fiennes who plays Dickens as ebullient, enthusiastic, and even flamboyant and is given a great opportunity to shine, which he does.. He also directs and was not originally set to play the lead but they couldn't find anyone else. Fiennes dominates the film so and yet the best parts for me was the work of an actress named Joanna Scanian who plays poor Mrs Dickens. Short and rotund and with an appearance of possible simple-mindedness (first impression) she rallies and practically steals the show. She is intelligent, perspicacious in how she views her husband, and is quietly courageous in an awkward scene with Nelly.

    After reading the separation letter from Charles, her breakdown is severe yet restrained exhibiting an extraordinary piece of slice-of-life acting. If Charles likeability, which is considerable, is to make us forgive him for his treatment of his wife, it will have to withstand the effect of her scenes, which makes us look at him more harshly. And yet she doesn't attack him directly, it's her person that effects us (and with very little screen time). After reading a little of the history, the film seems a faithful rendering.
    7cinematic_aficionado

    Affair in the 1850's

    If a renowned writer were to embark in an affair with a younger woman, it would make some headlines, generate some chatter but most of us will leave it at that.

    That was not the case in the 1850's. When esteemed author Charles Dickens begun an affair, all sorts of efforts were put in place to stop it from becoming public. Divorce in that time, was an absolute scandal, an abomination.

    So, this young, attractive, talented woman who in all certainty had a profound effect in the works of one of the most respected writers in the English language was in effect an invisible woman. Whilst she was the centre of Dickens' world, the world ought to not know her. Such were those times.

    Whilst it might appear as sluggish, even flat that is not so. We get to observe the effect of the affair amongst people who had a compulsion to appear composed and reserved at all times. It is a glimpse in to a world gone by.
    7aglowery

    Ralph Fiennes brings the literary legend to life

    With The Invisible Woman being the second feature in which Ralph Fiennes tackles Charles Dickens, you may say that the thespian, already known for his love of Shakespeare, has developed a new romance with English literature.

    With Fiennes at the helm, this biographical drama, based on the book by Claire Tomalin, takes a stroll into the private life of the public figure, Charles Dickens. Although The Invisible Woman positions itself at the heart of the Victorian literate, this is in fact the story of Nelly Ternan (Felicity Jones); hence the title.

    The bulk of this character-piece plays out as a flashback, as the narrative oscillates between the world of Dickens and the world post-Dickens. The mysterious title refers to the young Nelly, an avid-admirer of the literary colossus, as she enters into a secret affair with her idol. She spends the best part of her youth amorously involved with the writer, but given that Dickens was a lot older, it was inevitable that she would outlive her lover.

    Alone with her thoughts, Nelly, dressed in mournful black, marches along the beaches of Margate like a sleepwalker in the night, tormented by the loss of her companion; she must find a way to bring that chapter of her life to a close so that she may now move on.

    The picture paints Dickens as the talented and charitable man that he was, however we are also privy to a more sinister side of the wordsmith, as we learn of his malicious actions towards his wife (played by Joanna Scanlon).

    The camera takes its time, as it soaks up the brilliant performances of the cast and Abi Morgan's (Shame, The Iron Lady) masterful script provides a titillating narrative, as it transports us to the Dickensian period. Ultimately, The Invisible Woman stands as a beautifully crafted piece of filmmaking, however, it somewhat pales in comparison to Fiennes' earlier, more vigorous work. Anthony Lowery

    www.moviematrix.co.uk
    6philrich-785-393285

    A jigsaw puzzle with many missing pieces

    A 6 or a 7? I went with 6, but would have preferred 6.5.

    The film is beautifully made, which is no surprise, with beautiful costumes and scenery from the Victorian era, as well as being beautifully acted and well produced. However, although loosely based on the biographical book of the same name (The Invisible Woman), the plot line is vague and esoteric; that is, "intended for or likely to be understood by only a small number of people with a specialized knowledge or interest."

    We see glimpses into the life and behaviors of Dickens, his mistress Ellen "Nelly" Ternan, and Dickens' wife, but the film provides little depth or detail, and certainly no explanation for the meaning of these glimpses, or even a clear time line. If you know enough about Dickens ahead of time it will make sense; if not, it will remain a mystery (such as, "what was that scene about?") unless you, as I did this morning, start learning more about Dickens' life as he lived it, including better understanding the book the film was based upon. We see otherwise unexplained glimpses into the life of Dickens and Nelly, some of which seem to be inaccurate dramatizations (poetic license?), which have little meaning on their own, and leave you wondering what just happened, and why was that important. You'll get the overall picture, but it will be like a jigsaw puzzle with many missing pieces, some of which , because of those missing pieces, are actually incorrectly put together. If you're not already familiar with the life of Dickens and Ternan, read up on Dickens before you go, or be prepared to read up on him after you see the movie. But don't otherwise expect to come up with a clear picture of anything, except that Dickens and Ternan had a long-standing affair that affected her past his death.
    5pwiltsh

    The Invisible Woman - A Sexual Fantasy

    Claire Tomalin in the first chapter of 'The Invisible Woman' states that Fanny and Ellen Ternan were 'written out of any biographies of both Dickens and Trollope for two reasons'. Thus begins the first of many such statements that appear in her book that can't be substantiated. They are not facts, though they are presented as such. Any film based on the book by Claire Tomalin can only suffer, as a result, from the contrived nature and bias of the book.

    Yes, this film might have deserved 8 out of 10 stars if Charles Dickens hadn't come into it and it was simply the story of a writer who had an affair with a much younger woman in Victorian times. Unfortunately, Charles Dickens does come into it, and he has come into it in every review and discussion about this film that I've come across so far.

    The first half of Ralph Fiennes' film is beautifully nuanced and utterly delightful in its depiction of Dickens and his relationship with the Ternan family through their mutual love of the theatre. The developing relationship between Dickens and Ellen Ternan is persuasive in cinematic terms - until the downward slide into the mire of 'revelations' spawned by Claire Tomalin's book.

    Stripped of meaningful content, cinematography and acting too become meaningless. When a film is based on the life of a great writer like Charles Dickens, those who have read widely about his life and work will feel uneasy when he is taken out of context to fulfil a role aggressively forced on him by a less than scrupulous biographer or film maker. The so-called 'revelations' translated to film may spoil one's enjoyment of the narrative as surely as a poor reproduction of a film to a DVD will lessen its visual impact.

    Those who have a scant knowledge of Dickens and his work will more easily be able to accept this depiction of the writer and the man. Sadly, like many of the reviewers and others connected with the film, they may then become 'authorities' on Charles Dickens and his relationship with Ellen Ternan and busily go about perpetuating myths and gross distortions of facts.

    By the time furtive sex is followed by the birth of a still-born child and Dickens and Ellen appear unchaperoned in the Staplehurst train crash, the sound of Nelly's pacing on the beach at Margate becomes deafening - but also more laboured. We enter a world of fiction that is not nearly so satisfying. The more the film strays from known sources and tries to convince, the more it flounders and disappoints.

    One can only hope someone makes another film about Charles Dickens that does justice to everyone in a way that saves them from the strange mix of sexual fantasy and strident feminism they appear to have generated. While Nelly suffers from not having the reasons for the secrecy surrounding her relationship fully explored, Catherine Dickens and George Wharton Robinson suffer in a way that endows them with as much character as a couple of wooden pieces in a jig-saw puzzle.

    'It would be a far, far better thing' to stay home and read Dickens' letters or other biographies or more of Dickens' own writing or Edward Wagenknecht's 'Dickens and the Scandalmongers' or more about the social and sexual mores of the time than to believe this film could possibly shed any light on the less stereotypical but more complex relationship between Charles Dickens and Ellen Ternan.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ralph Fiennes and Felicity Jones appeared in Cemetery Junction (2010), in which they played father and daughter. In a 2013 interview with Jones and Fiennes on National Public Radio, Jones said that it was "weird" and "very Freudian" to go from playing one relationship to the other, but Fiennes disagreed, saying "It's just a job. Come on."
    • Goofs
      When collecting cash for the hospital, there is an 1895 Crown coin on the plate. Charles Dickens died in 1870.
    • Quotes

      Charles Dickens: A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human creature is a profound secret and mystery to every other.

      Nelly: Until that secret is given to another to look after. And then perhaps two human creatures may know each other.

    • Crazy credits
      The full cast list (in order of appearance) is presented in the style of a Dickens era theatre programme, with contemporary font and the performers' names preceded by "Mr." or "Ms."
    • Connections
      Featured in Film '72: Episode dated 30 January 2014 (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Sir Roger de Coverly
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      [Dickens dances with Nelly]

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 21, 2014 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Görünmeyen Kadın
    • Filming locations
      • 4 Princelet Street, Shoreditch, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • British Film Institute (BFI)
      • WestEnd Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,234,254
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,948
      • Dec 29, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,986,888
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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