counter
about us
 
Elective Affinities | Isabelle Huppert, Fabrizio Bentivoglio | Slow, very slow
 
 


Suche DVDs:   



 Elective Affinities  

Elective Affinities
Isabelle Huppert, Fabrizio Bentivoglio

Fox Lorber, 2005

average customer review:based on 4 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

 




A pleasant film to watch...

Made by the Taviani brothers, "Elective affinities" is well..., not exactly up to expectation. The film is simple and precise, which I find quite pleasant. It is based on a novel by Goethe, and the story shows how human lives are unable to match mathematical formulas.(Quite frankly, I find it curious matching something as illogical as emotions with something rational.) As the plot goes... A woman engages her lover and then, wed. They settle in on his estate and then the husband's friend arrives for a visit, at almost the same time the women's young daughter appears. Hmm... wonder what's going to happen?

However... some scenes tend to be routine though, which I didn't particularly like. But, overall... an agreeable film to watch... 3 stars.


 for more information click here


Slow, very slow

I was going to write a review of this, but there is little I can add to Peter Shelley's very perceptive review. I will relate my experience with the video. I chose it more or less at random, as I sometimes do (in this way I try to extent my horizons, or at least to come face to face with something different), but partially because it starred French actress Isabelle Huppert, whose work I admire. As I shifted in my seat through the languid development, I thought how odd and how out of sync with a modern story this is! Strangely coy and even "Victorian" for an Italian movie! After some time it occurred to me that the only explanation is that it was adapted from an eighteenth century novel! For some reason The Sorrows of Young Werther came to mind. When I discovered that Elective Affinities was indeed based on a novel by Goethe, I was very pleased with myself until I noticed on the video jacket a reference to Goethe that I must have read and forgotten.

Let me quote a passage from Goethe's novel, Elective Affinities (1808) found in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations that goes a long ways toward explaining why Carlotta (Huppert) does not immediately divorce her cheating husband and take up with the dashing architect: "The sum which two married people owe to one another defies calculation. It is an infinite debt, which can only be discharged through all eternity." Carlotta represents Goethe's point of view.

I would also like to note that this is not Huppert at her best. She is too much long of face, and that sly cynicism of hers is a little too much on display. Additionally (I guess I can't help but review this a little!) the self-satisfied privilege of the upper classes depicted here allows one to understand the reasons for the revolutions that would again and again threaten the old order in Europe throughout the nineteenth century and into the twentieth.


 for more information click here



products you might be interested in




recommendations

If you want to discover Isabelle Huppert (1953 - )






 



search for DVDs
elective affinities, affinities, elective



Google      toavi.com    web
dvd
apparel
baby
beauty
books
camera photo
classical music
computers
dvd
electronics
gourmet food
health personal care
kitchen
office products
outdoor living
computer video games
popular music
software
sporting goods
tools hardware
toys-games
vhs
watches jewelry







randomly chosen


book: Business Process Management (BPM): The Third Wave