In this austere adaptation of Thomas Hardy's 1895 novel JUDE THE OBSCURE, an intelligent young British man falls prey to romance, oppressive social conventions, and unspeakable tragedy in his unsanctioned relationship with his cousin. JUDE is a tragic romance, well acted by Kate Winslet (TITANIC), Rachel Griffiths (HILARY AND .. Read more
| Starring | Christopher Eccleston, Kate Winslet, Rachel Griffiths, Liam Cunningham |
|---|---|
| Director | Michael Winterbottom |
| Genres | Drama |
loading...
In this austere adaptation of Thomas Hardy's 1895 novel JUDE THE OBSCURE, an intelligent young British man falls prey to romance, oppressive social conventions, and unspeakable tragedy in his unsanctioned relationship with his cousin. JUDE is a tragic romance, well acted by Kate Winslet (TITANIC), Rachel Griffiths (HILARY AND JACKIE), and Christopher Eccleston (ELIZABETH) and wonderfully directed by Michael Winterbottom (WELCOME TO SARAJEVO).
| Starring | Christopher Eccleston, Kate Winslet, Rachel Griffiths, Liam Cunningham, June Whitfield, James Nesbitt, Mark Lambert, David Tennant |
|---|---|
| Director | Michael Winterbottom |
| Studio | UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 57 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 01 Jan 2001 Production year: 1996 |
| Format | DVD |
Co-produced by the BBC, this magnificent and appropriately distressing adaptation of Thomas Hardy's final novel did only fair business at British cinemas. Hardy described Jude the Obscure, published in 1896, as a deadly war waged between flesh and spirit. Sadly, the novel provoked so much outrage within Victorian society — one critic famously calling it obscene — that Hardy never wrote another. The story, which involves social rejection, unrequited love, suicide and, worst of all, intellectual snobbery and religious obsession, is Hardy's bleakest: Jude is a country stonemason who attempts to fulfil his promise by going to university, is betrayed by two women and by his intellectual mentor, then slips into poverty and much worse. Be warned, this is not the jolliest of tales, but it is absolutely gripping and, indeed, heartbreaking, and director Michael Winterbottom and writer Hossein Amini deserve all credit for refusing to compromise the story's grimmer aspects. As Jude, Christopher Eccleston has that haunted and naive look of a man buffeted by fate and destroyed by self-delusion, while Kate Winslet is perfect as Sue Bridehead, the fiery cousin whom Jude loves and whose vacillation really drives the story along. Visually, the film is suitably gloomy — to re-create Wessex and Oxford, Winterbottom used locations as far afield as Edinburgh and New Zealand — and at two hours it's a brilliant distillation of a literary classic.
An unhappy adaptation, with some jarringly anachronistic dialogue, which only occasionally gets to grips with Hardy's tragic story.
Michael Winterbottom's fine adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel 'Jude the Obscure' is a brave, intelligent and often overpowering piece of cinema.
Christopher Eccleston is the eponymous hero, a working-class stone mason who studies Latin in his spare time and dreams of gaining a place at Christminster University, encouraged by his inspirational teacher Phillotson (Liam Cunningham). Jude's plans of becoming a scholar are temporarily sidetracked when he marries Arabella (Rachel Griffiths), a pig farmer's daughter who he thinks is pregnant. After a short marriage, she tells him she isn't pregnant after all and leaves him for Australia (or so she says). Jude then travels to Christminster, where he falls in love with his cousin, a rule-breaking free spirit named Sue Bridehead (Kate Winslet). Jude and Sue seem perfect for each other, and at this point in the film, there seems to be the genuine possibility of happiness for its characters. Not so.
The English class system and religious pressures conspire against the couple as they try to carry on in the face of a seemingly unending cascade of disturbing tragedies that forever alters their lives and damages their love for each other beyond repair.
'Jude' is not easy viewing by any means, but the excellent cast, and Winterbottom's marvellous direction, make it a drama worth watching. Eccleston is magnificent as Jude, an intelligent and idealistic character who's dreams are dashed by an unbending society. The always excellent Winslet is also on superb form as the glimmer of hope in Jude's life.
The extraordinarily talented Winterbottom makes no compromises, yet manages to find some beauty in this harsh world.
This is an emotionally tough film, and one unexpected scene in particular absolutely floored me. But it's always honest, never manipulating the viewer into feeling emotions the movie hasn't earned.
It stands as one of Winterbottom's most accomplished films to date, with Eccleston giving a career-best display. An unforgettable and tragic love story, delivered with devastating force.
I've never read a Hardy novel but I knew this would be good seeing as Chris Eccleston was starring in it.
Excellent story, brillient acting and directing, must admit that Kate Winslet giving birth was a bit too graphic, but overall excellent film. Chris Eccleston is probably the best British actor around at the moment and hopefully he will continue to make excellent films
Actor Jude Law has described himself as "battered and bruised" following his split from ex-wife Sadie Frost. However, the Cold Mountain actor added that he felt stronger and happier since the couple's divorce last October. Sadie filed for divorce from the star on the grounds of "unreasonable behaviour". In a television interview on ITV1's This Morning, Jude admitted: "I think those sort of situations take a lot longer to heal and repair and to put back into order. " Read more
* The Amazon.co.uk prices on our site are updated every 24 hours and may not be up to date at the time you view this page.
To see the current new and "new and used" Amazon.co.uk prices, please click on the Buy button.