The Scarlet Letter (1995)
Facts
| Directed by | Roland Joffé |
| Cast | Demi Moore, Gary Oldman, Robert Duvall, Lisa Joliffe-Andoh, Edward Hardwicke, George Aguilar, Roy Dotrice, Joan Plowright, Robert Prosky, Diane Salinger, Francie Swift, Tim Woodward, Amy Wright and Sheldon Peters Wolfchild |
| Theatrical Release | October 13, 1995 |
| DVD Release | June 4, 2002 |
| Running Time | 135 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 786936182675 |
| Buy this item | $8.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 21 8:42 EST (details) 1 DVD, Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 45 new from $4.42, 16 used from $4.89 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| TRUE LOVE ALWAYS WINS |
| The Scarlet Letter |
| Picky picky |
I love the story line and the way the actors portrayed the deep and painful struggle between their hearts and the status quo of the times.
Gary Oldman is overwhelming in his role. I can't tear my eyes off the screen. I'm not as crazy about Demi, but the movie is very worth watching.
April 11, 2008
| From perplexity to propaganda |
I would feel comfortable giving this three stars, seeing as it does have a redeeming value for the discerning viewer just by being so transparently biased and provoking so many questions. However, my conscience won't let me. You see, this film is supposed to be based on a book by Nathanial Hawthorne, which just so happens to be one of the greatest novels ever written in English. What makes the novel so great in the first place is the way it deals with the manifold complexities, ambiguities, and contradictions inherent in the human experience. How does - and should - marriage relate to love? What is the role of law in society? Are human institutions capable of doing the work of the divine? Hawthorne addresses these sorts of questions in such a way that leaves the reader questioning them; he will not settle for an angry, emotional rant against the hypocrisy of puritanical society and the pain caused by a marriage without mutual affection. That would be far too easy and would not truly address the questions that would motivate such a polemic in the first place. The fact that such a rich and complex intellectual work has not only been turned into an "erotic tale of forbidden love," but an overly zealous and preachy one at that seriously irks me. In the hands of a Kubrick or a Fellini, I could very easily see a film adaptation that maintains the foreboding symbolism and moral ambiguity of the novel. The fact that the filmmakers chose to take another, simpler, route is a sign of their failure to keep to the spirit of the book. I couldn't care less how "freely adapted" the plot was if the spirit was preserved (see Fellini's Satyricon for a fine example of how this can be accomplished). But it wasn't. Two stars... but only because it's at least well-done propaganda. Production values have to come into play somehow... April 9, 2008
| A Truly, TRULY, Terrible Movie Beginning To End! |
Demi More's laughable and yet still painfully boring production of The Scarlet Letter is simply one of the worst motion pictures ever made. It is not merely bad, but remarkably bad. I found it completely absurd, tedious, ludicrous, and felt it was "freely adapted" to the detriment of the depth of the original source. This feminist, new agey re-telling of a classic bears scant resemblance to the Hawthorne tale and is unworthy of sharing the title. Sometimes a free adaptation can improve upon the original novel, as with the 1990's version of The Last of the Mohicans, but in this case the reverse was never truer. I could go on and on with what is wrong with this film but why don't I just say EVERYTHING is wrong with this film. Never have I laughed harder AT, not WITH, a movie in my life.
March 18, 2008
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