Originally posted by Jynohn
I thought the scenery was beautiful, and I LOVE Jude Law, but I didn't like the movie as much as I hoped I would. I agree that Nicole Kidman was much too old for the role of the ingenue and I don't think they gave it enough time to develop the love story. They basically showed them meeting, sharing one kiss and he was suddenly ripped away to go to war and you were supposed to be caught up in the tragedy of them being torn apart by war.
I wish they would have spent a little more time developing that part of the plot line. All in all it was a good movie, but I won't rush out to buy the DVD. Next time I need a Jude Law fix I'll watch The Talented Mr. Ripley again!
Well, that is what happened in the book. They meet, they are very stiff and formal with each other, you see that there is a spark of something there but because of their *proper* upbringings they cannot act on it. Then he gets ripped off to war and they start pining for each other. It is during the war when Inman does all his thinking and the woman (can't remember Nicole's characters name) does all of her pining away, that you start to see them as real people. That is where the movie kind of missed the mark--you didn't get to see their individual thought processes about what was happening to them--these *thoughts* were VERY detailed in the book (almost too much). The finally get back, get over their social requirements and stiffness, and it's over.
Also, in the book, the character Nicole played was very stiff, formal, and quite vapid. There wasn't much to her, at least not until the end of the book. So, in that regard, Nichole Kidman played the role very well; however, I"m not sure she was the perfect actress for the role. But I do think she gets a bum rap for her acting in this movie because that is how the character was in the book.
The other scene that the movie didn't do well was the "goat" scene. In the book, they depicted the old woman very well--nature loving, in tune with nature, healing, and very kind. The spent a lot of time on her in the book, so when she killed the goat, you kind of understand that it how it should be. But the movie kind of made it revolting.