As the story inexorably builds to a stunning climax, we can forgive the director's deliberate hand, and enjoy quite an exquisite movie.
Lady Chatterley (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:82
Fresh:61
Rotten:21
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Tasteful, poetic, yet sexually forthright, Lady Chatterley skillfully translates its source novel’s high-art erotica onto the big screen.
Theatrical Release:Jun 20, 2007 Limited
Box Office: $374,731
Synopsis: French director Pascale Ferran brings D.H. Lawrence's second and lesser-known version of LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER to the screen. Approaching three hours in length, the film moves at an achingly slow... French director Pascale Ferran brings D.H. Lawrence's second and lesser-known version of LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER to the screen. Approaching three hours in length, the film moves at an achingly slow pace as it explores its protagonist's emotional transformation. Set in England in the 1920s, the film begins with our heroine, played by Marina Hands, saying goodbye to her husband, Clifford, who is heading off to war. Left behind on their grand country estate, Constance gets the first taste of the loneliness and isolation she will later become accustomed to when he returns home paralyzed. Suddenly reduced to the role of nurse, the young woman cares for her invalid husband and listlessly putters about the large property, desperately dreaming of escape. She finds this outlet in Parkin (Jean-Louis Coulloc'h), the deceptively brutish gamekeeper down the hill. Skeptical of Constance at first, Parkin begrudgingly produces an extra set of keys to his shed when asked, opening the door to an affair that will awaken something deeply repressed in both parties. Clifford inadvertently encourages his wife by dismissing her boredom and unhappiness as unimportant. When the unspoken tension between Parkin and Constance eventually explodes into a fiery sexual encounter, the two embark on a journey of sexual awakening and personal discovery. LADY CHATTERLEY is beautifully filmed, providing an extremely detailed account of the heroine's visual surroundings. Scenery functions symbolically to show how Constance blooms in the aura of Parkin's love. But as passionate and subversive as their affair is, the reality of their social positions is always present, with visual clues creating a sense of constant threat to the relationship. When Constance goes off on a carefree, extravagant vacation with her fashionable sister and others from her own class, homemade-style footage of her trip contrasts with the controlled way in which her home life is captured, and demonstrates just how far she is from that world. The film's ending is rather open-ended, suggesting several possible outcomes by calling into question how much the early-20th-century social structure will matter in the end. [More]
Starring: Marina Hands, Jean-Louise Coulloc'h, Hippolyte Girodot, Helene Alexandridis
Starring: Marina Hands, Jean-Louise Coulloc'h, Hippolyte Girodot, Helene Alexandridis, Michel Vincent
Director: Pascale Ferran
Director: Pascale Ferran
Screenwriter: Pascale Ferran, Roger Bohbot
Producer: Kristina Larsen, Gilles Sandoz
Studio: Kino International
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Reviews for Lady Chatterley
A pastoral romance based on an earlier version of Lawrence's novel that is softer and can stand on its own terms, despite lacking the class distinctions that would distinguish the final version.
All of the qualities its admirers see in the film are indeed there, and visible, but I was not much moved. Lawrence wrote much better novels that inspired much better movies...
Tasteful yet ecstatically turned-on, [director] Ferran’s interpretation reworks legendary highbrow 'smut' into a textured story of rebirth.
Pascale Ferran's version of Lady Chatterley feels bracingly fresh, vital and modern.
It captures the animal attraction we call lust and carefully tracks its evolution to true love. For all its faults, this beautifully shot, sexually graphic film is a gem.
Watching an emasculated member of the ruling class get cuckolded by a proletariat whets one’s appetite for seeing the master-slave dialectic played out with more vigor on a less private and pastoral stage. Why not in Russian and at even greater length?
A quintessentially English novel has become a quintessentially French film.
A film of sun-dappled beauty and unbridled joys that arrive as much as a surprise to the audience as they do to the characters.
It's fairly baffling to see a story about animal desires presented with such a lack of animal immediacy.
It's a profoundly thought-out picture about a love affair that blooms organically and spontaneously.
[A] startling, womanly adaptation of a lesser-known, more direct version of D.H. Lawrence's famous novel, one of three he wrote.
Nearly three hours long, Lady Chatterley passes as swiftly as the summer shower. This is not so much a love story (and even less a story about love) than it is a movie of passionate loveliness.
A tender, lyrical, and graceful screen adaptation of D. H. Lawrence's controversial novel about the sexual awakening of one woman.
A soft-core French chick flick, all glossy prettiness, with the depth of a puddle.
Lady Chatterley leads us into the thickets of D.H. Lawrence’s fiercely tender saga of a sexual communion between a man and a woman of different classes, but similarly affected in their enforced solitudes by the wonders and glories of nature.
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