The Thorn Birds (1983)
Facts
| Directed by | Daryl Duke |
| Cast | Richard Chamberlain, Rachel Ward, Barbara Stanwyck, Christopher Plummer, Jean Simmons, Philip Anglim, Bryan Brown, Dwier Brown, Brett Cullen, Stephanie Faracy, John Friedrich, Earl Holliman, Ken Howard, Richard Kiley, Piper Laurie, Allyn Ann McLerie, Sydney Penny, Richard Venture and Mare Winningham |
| Theatrical Release | March 27, 1983 |
| DVD Release | February 3, 2004 |
| Running Time | 487 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 085393162429 |
| Buy this item | $24.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 16 8:42 EST (details) 2 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Collector's Edition, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Dolby, Miniseries, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 44 new from $19.99, 10 used from $19.99, 1 collectible from $49.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| In Defense of Rachel Ward |
1) She was extraordinarily beautiful, hard to look away from when she was on-screen. It was plausible that a priest or any other man would be drawn to her. I can't imagine a better-cast Meggie than Rachel Ward.
2) Ward did a remarkable job of portraying convincing love scenes with a gay actor (Richard Chamberlain). I do not know if the cast was aware of his proclivity. If nothing else, Ward's gaydar may have signaled her to the truth of Chamberlain's orientation. Both actors deserve credit for pulling this off.
3) The reality on the set was that Ward had found her "masculine counterpart" in Bryan Brown. They would marry, raise a family, and see one of their daughters act on screen. Kudos to Ward for convincing the camera (and everyone else) that Richard Chamberlain was the love of her life.
4) Unforgettable goodbye scene #1: Meggie parting ways with Ralph on Matlock Island. I admit I was rather young when I first saw this, but I felt terribly torn and grieved watching this scene. The only comparably wrenching scene that comes to mind is Debra Winger saying goodbye to her kids in Terms of Endearment.
5) Unforgettable goodbye scene #2: the riveting portrayal of Meggie telling Luke their marriage was over. She was a commanding presence, lancing Luke's ego with surgical precision. Don't feel badly for him. He had it coming.
6) Ward was a former model with limited acting experience at this point in her career. That she could pull off items 2 - 5 so beautifully was remarkable. Item number one just added icing to the cake.
Thank you Rachel Ward for a once in a lifetime portrayal. All the better that you met your true man (Bryan Brown) on the set. November 6, 2008
| great |
| A Simple Review |
Its been almost thirty years since the novel The ThornBirds was Published and this miniseries captures the feel,depth,and asepect of this Novel by Colleen McCullough. I recommend though reading the novel first and then watching the miniseries . August 2, 2008
| Great movie |
| "What Sin Did You Commit?" ~ Necessary Sacrifices On The Journey To Becoming The Perfect Priest |
`The Thorn Birds' boasts an excellent cast of well-knowns and lesser-knowns along with some bright, new faces that for the most part delivered the most memorable performances of the production. Of course if you've seen the film you already know that when I speak of bright new faces I'm primary referring to the enchanting, adorable Sydney Penny in the role of little Meggie Cleary as the child who steals the heart of Father Ralph de Bricassart (Richard Chamberlain), the ambitious Catholic priest who is to become trapped forever between his desires for both divine and human love.
The first half of the film featuring Sydney Penny is by far my favorite. Her relationship with the adoring Priest is innocent and nurturing and Sydney's smile lights up the screen with such warmth and love you can't help but fall in love with both her and the storyline.
Eventually Meggie grows up and is replaced by the stunning Rachel Ward, definitely not a bad swap but unfortunately from that point onward the film takes on the mood and texture of a harlequin romance dominated by Father Ralph's inability to act decisively and choose who he loves more, God or Meggie. The portrayal of his constant "inner struggle" made the plot a little too redundant at times. I think if I had heard him say "but I love God more" just one more time I might go mad.
Of course what irritates one viewer is quite often just what other viewers are looking for and I'm certain that some of what I've written will be preceived as a lack of sensitivity and experience in the ways of the heart (such is the fate of men). Be that as it may, the long enduring popularity of this film certainly cannot be denied, nor dismissed and its long overdue release on DVD is without doubt going to find a large, passionate audience anxiously awaiting to have their hearts broken all over again.
My Rating: -4 ½ Stars-. July 21, 2008
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