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Vanity Fair


Directed by: Mira Nair
Starring: Reese Witherspoon
Genre:
Drama/Romance
Run Time: 141 min.
Release Date:
September
2004
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by Byron
Merritt |
Becky Sharp is an orphaned child after the death
of her opera singing mother (years before) and her painter father (more
recent). She's quickly bustled into a house of governesses where her
life's ambitions will collide with what is expected of her.
Becky grows quickly and is soon offered a job within the family of a
wealthy woman whom she'd shared her time in training with (both women
now having been trained to be governesses). But Becky isn't satisfied to
just be a low-slung teacher of well-to-do children. She wants to scale
the walls of indifference that separate her from the upper echelon of
society. And she's willing to do just about anything to get there.
Along the way there's deceit, anger, backstabbing, love, loss, and
redemption.
Reese Witherspoon
(WALK THE LINE) stars as the beautiful and conniving Becky Sharp, and
does so with surprising strength. Never having seen Mrs. Witherspoon in
a role of this type, I was stunned to see her English portrayal pulled
off extremely well. In fact, all of the actors and actresses did a great
job (Gabriel Byrne, Jim Broadbent, Bob Hoskins, Deborah Findlay, etc.).
I was also very pleased with the sets, the costumes, and the colorful
ending of the film as Becky finally makes it to India.
Where this movie had problems was in execution. We leap forward many
years several times in the film and this was disorienting if not
downright irritating to the movie watcher. I felt like I'd gotten a type
of time whiplash .
I've yet to read William Thackeray's VANITY FAIR, of which this film is
adapted from. I have read other reviews which lambaste the film for
maneuvering too far from the books intent, but I'm obviously unable to
comment on that here. Here I'm only able to rate the movie on its own
merits.
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Image from Vanity Fair

DVD cost: $9.98
Purchase:
Tower.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
Most of the costumes were
purposefully made a little smaller than necessary, to slightly alter the
overall look of them.
Movie Quote: "I
thought her a mere social climber, but now I see she's a mountaineer."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Vanity Fair
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