Being Julia
2004 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 03/22/2005
Features:
DVD Features:
Region [unknown]
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Subtitles - English - Closed Captioning
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Behind the Scenes: Featurette
Audio Commentary: István Szabó - Director, Annette Bening, Jeremy Irons - Stars
Trailers: Sony Pictures Previews
Time:
104
mins.
J&R Item # 1137375_2
UPC # 043396091740
Label: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
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As she enters her early 40s, London theater actress Julia Lambert (Annette Bening) starts having a nervous breakdown. She still rules the West End, but is growing too old for ingenue parts. When Tom Fennell (Shaun Evans), an adoring lad half her age, comes into her life, a clandestine affair begins. Though she's happy for a while, Julia eventually winds up in a face-off with a Tom's other, much younger lover (Lucy Punch). Luckily, the spirit of Julia's cantankerous old acting coach (London theater legend Michael Gambon) follows Julia around offering some tough-love encouragement.
Set in the late 1930s, this is a fine costume comedy-drama about the sorrows and joys of art. The eternal question of "when am I acting and when am I myself?" has seldom been addressed as intelligently as it is here; Bening seems to be not only tangling with her own status as an aging beauty, but also with the limits of her own acting abilities, and it's a pleasure to see her transcend both with such triumphant exuberance. Bravo, Miss Bening, and kudos to director Szab� (MEPHISTO) for rendering his obvious love of theater, cinema, and actors with such contagious warmth. Other fine performances include Jeremy Irons as Julia's manager/husband and Juliet Stevens as her jaded maid.
Cast:
"Ms. Bening shows both fragility and dignity, managing a hectic plot with glamour and aplomb."
-- A. O. Scott
, (New York Times)
"Bening and a lustrous ensemble cast have brought to vivid life W. Somerset Maugham's 1937 novella THEATRE....They have done so with such verve and panache that this film can never be described as merely a romp or a star vehicle." -- Kevin Thomas , (Los Angeles Times) "[I]t has enough surprises to keep you guessing, and for Annette Bening it's the liveliest of comebacks." -- Owen Gleiberman , (Entertainment Weekly) "It is an expert performance from Bening, combining coquetry, lust, anger, sarcasm, vulnerability and hauteur..." -- Geoffrey Macnab , (Sight and Sound) "BEING JULIA finds old-fashioned fun in a 1937 W. Somerset Maugham novella..." -- Stephen Farber , (Movieline's Hollywood Life) |