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Madame Bovary (1991)
Released By: Republic Pictures Home Video   Rating: PG-13   In Theaters: N/A



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Studio: Republic Pictures Home Video
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Director: Claude Chabrol
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Christophe Malavoy, Isabelle Huppert, Jean-Francois Balmer
Published ID: 4060
UPC: 0782000002, 6301971604
Plot: French film version of Gustave Flaubert's tale of a 19th century woman whose boredom with her marriage to a struggling doctor leads to several affairs.
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Flaubert + Chabrol = Period Drama
Added 11/15/2008

"Madame Bovary," based on the novel by Gustave Flaubert, stars Isabelle Huppert in the title role. Unsuccessfully prosecuted by the French government as "immoral" after its publication in 1857, "Madame Bovary" is the story of a country doctor's wife bored with the banalities and emptiness of her provincial life in 19th-century France. To escape, she throws herself into love affairs with a suave local landowner (Rodolphe Boulanger) and a law student (Leon Dupuis) and runs up huge debts, much to the dismay of her dull husband. The 1991 film, directed by Claude Chabrol, closely follows Flaubert's novel and beautifully captures most of the famous scenes. Filmed in Rouen and neighboring villages, it lavishly evokes 19th-century France with its winding country roads, meadows, and homes. Period costumes complete the portrait of the era. The movie is in French with English subtitles. The two-disc DVD includes the bonus documentary "Isabelle Huppert: A Life of Acting.
3 out of 3 people found this helpful.
Every sin demands a prize!
Added 6/30/2007

Madame Bovary is one of the most priceless examples of the Romantic literature that stands out among a group of related works in other countries. As a matter of fact, you may include Anna Karenina in Russia, Effie Briest in Germany and Tess in England.

The common denominator has to do with the lack of satisfaction, the ceaseless search of new experiences, far beyond the hover of social conventionalisms, boredom and the febrile circumstance of breaking the chains of the tradition, it's far to be an apology to adultery, it's the final result of the Romantic view of the feminine universe, where the women just began to realize the importance of them as human being and not simply as an object for sexual enjoyment.

So, this adaptation made by Claude Chabrol, takes into account this scream of desperation, loneliness, boredom and hopeless about the dreams and unsatisfied desires of simple woman, curious but endowed of a strong character who realizes her vision of the world is beyond the approach of her weak husband.

She will decide - regardless the social conventionalisms - to follow her bliss and her pursuit for happiness, no matter the consequences she had to pay after the scandal is reveled. But that fatal decision has its prize, and soon the ambition, caprices will demand its counterpart, that slow but irreversibly will lead her to a tragic final.

But what I mostly enjoyed of the movie was the way Chabrol carved in relief these little sins of the social environment, whose moral corruption and ethic decay bright with nasty intensity.

Isabelle Huppert, shows us once more why she was the perfect actress to perform this role, the camerawork and the theatrical feature of the play may be appreciated in its horrid intensity and superb realism.

Don't miss this classic film, frequently included among the most representative ones any time. In fact, the prestigious "Facets" included this one among the best 600 foreign films ever made, and that means by itself a remarkable opinion.

Go for this one and enjoy it over and over. It's a masterpiece.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
The Ice Princess ,the choppy script and the "loveless" lovers
Added 1/17/2007

Not knowing the original source material by Flaubert allowed me to view this 1991 adaptation for the presented movie itself.In a nutshell,the script was extremely choppy and clunky( like a figure skater who proceeds from jump to jump with no connecting movement),the "passion" of Bovary and her "lovers" was positively passionLESS(where did these people learn to kiss???),and Isabelle Huppert's interpretation of the title character made Scarlett O'Hara seem more like Mother Theresa of Calcutta!The only character that summoned any sympathy from me was Dr.Bovary who was hopelessly devoted to his icy,selfish,narcissistic wife.
I watched this film because the current Golden Globe nominated movie LITTLE CHILDREN starring Kate Winslet and Patrick Wilson is based out of the novel MADAME BOVARY and is far more interesting with it's tight and seemless script,flawless acting and direction.Having seen LITTLE CHILDREN,MADAME BOVARY seemed simply dull,lifeless and especially lacking in passion.I have never seen such awful and ridiculous "love scenes" than the ones in this film.For a French film that was to be somewhat scandalous, there most certainly was no Ooo-La-La!
Pretty costumes were the only things that remotely made this period piece watchable.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Madame Bovary DVD
Added 1/3/2007

A must-see movie to learn the about perils of greed. Excellent protrayal by Isabelle Hupert. Best if you know French
0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
One of the best......
Added 4/25/2006

This is one of my top favourite adaptions of this life changing story.

They stuck well to the book and the "feel" of Emma, the locales and the motivations. It seems a lot of adapations don't do that.

Huppert I thought was perfect to play Emma. She had just the right self-centered, clueless passion.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Flaubert + Chabrol = Period Drama
Added 11/15/2008

"Madame Bovary," based on the novel by Gustave Flaubert, stars Isabelle Huppert in the title role. Unsuccessfully prosecuted by the French government as "immoral" after its publication in 1857, "Madame Bovary" is the story of a country doctor's wife bored with the banalities and emptiness of her provincial life in 19th-century France. To escape, she throws herself into love affairs with a suave local landowner (Rodolphe Boulanger) and a law student (Leon Dupuis) and runs up huge debts, much to the dismay of her dull husband. The 1991 film, directed by Claude Chabrol, closely follows Flaubert's novel and beautifully captures most of the famous scenes. Filmed in Rouen and neighboring villages, it lavishly evokes 19th-century France with its winding country roads, meadows, and homes. Period costumes complete the portrait of the era. The movie is in French with English subtitles. The two-disc DVD includes the bonus documentary "Isabelle Huppert: A Life of Acting.
3 out of 3 people found this helpful.
Every sin demands a prize!
Added 6/30/2007

Madame Bovary is one of the most priceless examples of the Romantic literature that stands out among a group of related works in other countries. As a matter of fact, you may include Anna Karenina in Russia, Effie Briest in Germany and Tess in England.

The common denominator has to do with the lack of satisfaction, the ceaseless search of new experiences, far beyond the hover of social conventionalisms, boredom and the febrile circumstance of breaking the chains of the tradition, it's far to be an apology to adultery, it's the final result of the Romantic view of the feminine universe, where the women just began to realize the importance of them as human being and not simply as an object for sexual enjoyment.

So, this adaptation made by Claude Chabrol, takes into account this scream of desperation, loneliness, boredom and hopeless about the dreams and unsatisfied desires of simple woman, curious but endowed of a strong character who realizes her vision of the world is beyond the approach of her weak husband.

She will decide - regardless the social conventionalisms - to follow her bliss and her pursuit for happiness, no matter the consequences she had to pay after the scandal is reveled. But that fatal decision has its prize, and soon the ambition, caprices will demand its counterpart, that slow but irreversibly will lead her to a tragic final.

But what I mostly enjoyed of the movie was the way Chabrol carved in relief these little sins of the social environment, whose moral corruption and ethic decay bright with nasty intensity.

Isabelle Huppert, shows us once more why she was the perfect actress to perform this role, the camerawork and the theatrical feature of the play may be appreciated in its horrid intensity and superb realism.

Don't miss this classic film, frequently included among the most representative ones any time. In fact, the prestigious "Facets" included this one among the best 600 foreign films ever made, and that means by itself a remarkable opinion.

Go for this one and enjoy it over and over. It's a masterpiece.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
The Ice Princess ,the choppy script and the "loveless" lovers
Added 1/17/2007

Not knowing the original source material by Flaubert allowed me to view this 1991 adaptation for the presented movie itself.In a nutshell,the script was extremely choppy and clunky( like a figure skater who proceeds from jump to jump with no connecting movement),the "passion" of Bovary and her "lovers" was positively passionLESS(where did these people learn to kiss???),and Isabelle Huppert's interpretation of the title character made Scarlett O'Hara seem more like Mother Theresa of Calcutta!The only character that summoned any sympathy from me was Dr.Bovary who was hopelessly devoted to his icy,selfish,narcissistic wife.
I watched this film because the current Golden Globe nominated movie LITTLE CHILDREN starring Kate Winslet and Patrick Wilson is based out of the novel MADAME BOVARY and is far more interesting with it's tight and seemless script,flawless acting and direction.Having seen LITTLE CHILDREN,MADAME BOVARY seemed simply dull,lifeless and especially lacking in passion.I have never seen such awful and ridiculous "love scenes" than the ones in this film.For a French film that was to be somewhat scandalous, there most certainly was no Ooo-La-La!
Pretty costumes were the only things that remotely made this period piece watchable.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
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