Lady Chatterley
In the Chatterley country estate, monotonous days follow one after the other for Constance, trapped by her marriage and her sense of duty. During spring, deep in the heart of Wragby forest, she encounters Parkin, the estate’s gamekeeper. A tale of an encounter, a difficult apprenticeship, a slow awakening to sensuality for her, a long return to life for him. Or how love is but one with experience and transformation.
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- Cast:
- Marina Hands , Jean-Louis Coulloc'h , Hippolyte Girardot , Hélène Alexandridis , Hélène Fillières , Bernard Verley , Sava Lolov
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Reviews
Simply Perfect
Sadly Over-hyped
Pretty Good
Absolutely Fantastic
Bored, inhibited Lady Chatterley is a woman of privilege who has a kinky fascination with lower-class men.When she indulges her curiosity and engages in wordless, clothed sex with her gamekeeper we are invited to share in the fantasy that an affair with one's servant can bring happiness.This fairy tale of a film kept me interested enough to watch it to the end. I'd never read the book, or I might have been more impressed with the story here. However, I never really cared about the protagonist's happiness. Her blase, totally conflict-free comings and goings seemed like narcissistic self-indulgence after awhile.And her chats with oafish Parkin toward the end of the film struck me as yuppyish anachronism. What's more, the film's ending was jarringly abrupt in the version I caught on Sundance Channel. I can't believe that with all the cinematographic efforts evident here, Parkin's eyes-in-the-headlights stare was what the director intended. Sheesh!
Lush, leisurely paced movie that shows that sex is not obscene or vulgar. It's as natural as the beautiful fields and streams where the two main characters spend most of their time together. Watching them in this setting, their eventual sexual encounters feel natural and normal unlike so many movies were sex is treated as something dirty and shameful. Unfortunately, the ending just does not work. After drawing the viewer in with several long, lush, sensual scenes, the movie screeches to a halt after a short 5 minute conversation. It doesn't work and there's a few other scenes as well (the one where Lady Chatterley's waiting in her chauffeured car for her husband at the mine) that go nowhere. With a different ending and little editing, this could have been a masterpiece.
This latest, French version of the well known story starts right away with a distinct flavour of its own screen captions as those used in the silent era. But that signature is only superficial. The real difference is in the treatment of the subject matter: sex.Those who go far back enough will remember the first publishing in the 1970s of "The joy of sex", which is not unlike the "Field Guide" in "The Spiderwick Chronicles" (2008) except for the subject matter. That book which unreservedly hailed sex as a natural, joyous experience was rather courageous at the time. This movie follows very much on the same spirit. The plot is simple the story of Lady Chatterley's affair with the gamekeeper when her husband Lord Clifford is wheelchair bound, being a war casualty.Unlike Hollywood movies that take the audience in a split second fast cut from initial encounter to hot steaming sex in bed, Lady Chatterley takes its good time. The first 45 minutes, looking more like National Geographic or Discovery Channel, takes the audience through long-range and close-up shots of flowers, plants, squirrels, chicken, rustling leaves all part of an idyllic setting centered in the gamekeeper Parkin's humble hut far away from his master's mansion. There Lady Chatterley goes daily, initially following the doctor's instructions that the serene outdoors is the best prescription for her failing health. What follows is something "that is bound to happen" as Parkin puts it, to which the Lady completely agrees.The remarkable thing about this movie is the innocence that embraces the protagonists. It is not quite like Mrs Robinson and Benjamin Braddock "shaking hands" in "The graduate" (1967), if you remember that movie. While it started more as physical attraction than anything else, the relationship between Lady C. and Parkin evolves, through deepening affection, into genuine love. But even at the very beginning, there is something quite remarkable. The proliferation of sex scenes in movies today needs no exaggeration, but I don't think I've ever seen anything like the look of the quiet pleasure on Lady C's face right after their first love-making. She did not reach orgasm this first time; that is quite clear (that came later in another encounter, under a tree in the forest). But there is such a simple, grateful satisfaction on her face that she almost glows and that look of childlike innocence. Marina Hands is perfect for the role.The story of Lady Chatterley became famous (or infamous) in the hands of D.H. Lawrence as a tale of insatiable lust. In this winner of five Cesars (France's Oscar) including best film and best actress, the French movie makers have rendered it into a gentle, tender love story of sheer beauty and joy. Even the unhappy ending elicits only a sigh rather than a sob. This is a delightfully refreshing cinematic experience one least expects from the title.
I really love this film. I'd never read Lawrence's novel but feel absolutely compelled to now after watching this film. The director, Pascal Ferran, has created a work of art, putting this beautiful story into film and the leads, Marina Hands and Jean-Louis Coulloch, are perfect as Constance and Parkin. It is a slow moving film and it last for more than two and a half hours, but it is quiet and fresh has an adult innocence about it. The last scene where Parkin tells Constance that he can live anywhere, in anyplace, in any house because they are not home, she is his home, and how she swells up in tears and tells him that she doesn't mind if he sees other women,"if your heart remains gentle, you'll always be with me." That last scene really touched me. I'm glad it garnered so many awards. Marina Hands was absolutely stunning in her portrayal of Lady Chatterley, Bravo!!