Madame Bovary (1949)
Facts
| Cast | Jennifer Jones |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1948 |
| DVD Release | March 6, 2007 |
| Running Time | 114 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 012569795068 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 12 9:17 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, NTSC, Subtitled Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 1.0), English (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled) Or 49 new from $8.82, 11 used from $7.99 |
About Madame Bovary
Lovely Emma Bovary longs for romance glamour possessions. Wed to a country doctor she instead gets routine motherhood and penny-pinching. So when she catches the eye of a handsome aristocrat Emma risks all to reach for what she thinks will be happiness. Jennifer Jones stars in this lush adaptation of the Gustave Flaubert novel that scandalized 19th-century France. The film's capstone is the stunning ballroom scene contrasting Emma's social success with her husband's failure culminating in his drunken arrival on the dance floor. In the famed sequence director Vincente Minnelli skillfully combines dissolves cross-cuts pans long takes - a library of techniques - into a seamless triumph of head-spinning gaiety heart-breaking despair and moviemaking artistry.Running Time: 114 min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA UPC: 012569795068 Manufacturer No: 79506 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A fine romance |
"Madame Bovary" is framed with a fascinating device- Gustave Flabuert (James Mason) being put on trial for his "obscene" and "immoral" novel. Flaubert makes the argument that Bovary's downfall lay in being raised on romance novels;it was her upbringing,beyond her control,that made her the way she was.
Jennifer Jones is luminous as the romantic,unhappy,morbidly sentimental Madame Bovary. She transforms the adulterous,pathetic woman into a sympathetic character. Van Heflin is quietly marvelous as her plain,hard-working doctor husband. Madame Bovary longs for a passionate life like the characters she reads about in romance novels;a female Don Quixote. Instead of tilting at windmills,she finds herself playing with the lances of handsome younger men. Louis Jordan brings his Gallic good looks&charm to his role as one of Bovary's younger lovers.
Vincente Minnelli's production of "Madame Bovary" is a little jewel. He shows adultery&its devastating consequences. While he simplifies the novel,he also makes Flaubert's clinical writing style into something deeply human&meaningful. "Madame Bovary" is highly underrated. It's a silver screen classic from Hollywood's Golden Age. February 15, 2008
| breathtaking costumes, great acting and direction |
December 28, 2007
| an amazing movie! |
| Great crack-whore scene at the end |
| Masterful adaptation of a difficult piece. |
What Minnelli so masterfully and ironically captures here is the "dream machine" that drives Madame Bovary (and society) to be dissatisfied with their daily lives, to want and need more and therefore to be perpetually unhappy with what they have. Of course, Minnelli was part of that machine for Hollywood, which is the irony. Here he uses the period-correct analogy of romance novels and magazine ads (and to a lesser extent operas and plays) as vehicles that feed and drive Bovary's dissonance with her reality. (James Mason as Flaubert, too!)
The irony that Flaubert was faulted for denegrating the french woman is fully captured here as well. This version still doesn't get to a real meaty statement of realization that men were not considered immorral or corrupt it they have affairs and forget about their children; but women were. Personally, I think that may have been one of Flaubert's real points - this same behavior would have been tolerated and venerated in a male.
Where this production succeeds so brilinatly over the others I mentioned is in the writing and performance of Emma. She is clearly delineated as being a victim of the commercials of her time - the ultimate consumer, and therefore very identifiable. Jone's own personal charm also factors in here. Her fresh innocence and desire to be liked and to entertain come through the role and make her sweeter. Annis is often a bit self satisfied and Hubbert ice cold, making their Emmas less likable, although perfectly valid and well performed roles, just the difference that writing, production and acting bring to the role.
Minnelli liked women and identified with foibles. He gives a very nice slant to Dr. Bovary, too. (Gives him a little more self knowledge and honor than Flaubert did, which also colors the relationship and the film.) Louis Jordan as her dream man is also colored very nicely here, as being sincerely in love with her and very conflicted. Something he does very well, and this all creates a marvelously satisfying production and package. When you add the great score, you have a very fine film indeed. May 1, 2007
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