Movie Reviews for Middlemarch

Middlemarch

Middlemarch List Price: $6.78
Our Price: $6.74
You Save: $8.20 (55%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $6.45 (click here)
Category: DVD
See more DVD releases


(Click here)
Buy this DVD movie at online store in your country
Canada

Movie Reviews of Middlemarch

Movie Review: Excellent
Summary: 4 Stars

Muy buena adaptación del libro de George Eliot: los cambios que experimentan los personajes, la representación de la época con sus discusiones políticas y religiosas, muy cuidada y bien actuada. Especialmente quienes interpretan a Dorothea, Casaboun, Lydgate and Rosamond.

Movie Review: Love this movie
Summary: 4 Stars

I rented this from Netflix but liked it so much I bought it. That is how I try most of my movies before purchasing them. I love this era and the characters. Rufus Sewell is one of my favorite period actors.
If you like this era I think you'll like this movie.Another favorite is Cranford.

Movie Review: Middlemarch
Summary: 4 Stars

Loved this movie! Sad story in many ways, but its because of choices people make. George Elliot is a writer that pulls out the true character of people to weave the story. Sometimes the ending is very surprising.

Movie Review: Excellent adaption of book
Summary: 4 Stars

This version of Middlemarch is excellent, if you like the book in the first place. It tends to drag in a few places (as the book does), but overall a worthy movie/series!

Movie Review: "Pride and Prejudice" this ain't.
Summary: 3 Stars

Although this BBC miniseries is not the top one we've seen, it still has its moments. Also, it's quite a bargain for 7 hours of viewing. To be sure, rich character development, beautiful scenery, and fine acting, are all there. But the story is very much a 19th century soap opera with many of the key characters acting in a self-destructive, petulant way. Middlemarch is a pseudonym for one of the midland cities in England, most likely, Coventry. The town has its country charm, but many of the inhabitants are small-minded and petty. Few characters are really worth worrying about, with the exception of the Garth family who will be noted further below.

The central character, Dorothea Brooke, is born to an aristocratic life, along with her sister Cecilia. Their parents died while the sisters were young and both girls are taken in by their uncle, Arthur Brooke, played by Robert Hardy. He dotes on the girls as if they were his own and tries to make them happy. Despite all this, Dorothea feels guilty for her privileged life and longs to do something profound in the world. Instead of marrying the next door neighbor, the dashing, young Sir James Chettam, she is attracted to an old fossil and religious scholar, Rev. Edward Casaubon, who is at least 20 years older than her. (Sir James marries Cecilia in one of the few bright spots of the story). Dorothea's life with Casaubon turns into a nightmare, as their marriage is never physically consummated. One reason for this may be that every day for him is a "bad hair day." Mr. Casaubon spends his time on vainglorious sophistry and religious wanderings and eventually dies of a heart attack. While this is going on, the young idealist, Mr. Ladislaw, Casaubon's nephew, meets and falls for Dorothea. We learn that one of the stipulations in Casaubon's will is that Dorothea will lose her position and fortune if she marries Ladislaw. Of course, this is what happens in the end and viewers are left wondering she didn't give away her estate first and then run off with Ladislaw. At the conclusion of the story, the narrator tells us that Ladislaw is elected to Parliament but doesn't say much more. We're left to hope that he and Dorothea had a happy life together after much disappointment and despair. Nevertheless, we're told that when Dorothea dies she is left in an "unvisited tomb." Who needs that?

Other threads of the story are equally soapy, as we are introduced to the young doctor, Lydgate, and his eventual bride, Rosamund Vincy. Rosamund is daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Vincy. He is a merchant and the town mayor. Son Fred is a disappointment to his family throughout most of the story and has trouble making his way in the world. (Fred is played by Colin Firth's younger brother Jonathan and thus is the only connection we could find to the 1995 production of "Pride and Prejudice." After getting depressed watching "Middlemarch," we just had to re-view segments of P & P.) Fred is befriended by Mr. Caleb Garth, father of Mary Garth, Fred's love interest. Mary won't accept marrying Fred until he learns how to make a respectable living which he eventually does as apprentice to her father. They manage some of the local farms and estates and do well. Fred and Mary eventually end up together which is about the only trace of a happy ending this long story provides.

Back to Dr. Lydgate, he is also an idealist and donates his time in building up a big, new hospital in Middlemarch. He hopes to make the hospital a major center for the study and cure of fevers of all types. In his private practice, Lydgate does much to upset the existing social structure and becomes unpopular with most of the local power brokers. An example of this is where Lydate suggests a glass of wine for one of the locals rather than a concoction from an older doctor. (At this stage, viewers may be tempted to reach for a bottle of wine or something stronger, too.) Lydgate does gain support from Mr. Nicholas Bulstrode who becomes his friend and patron. Sadly, Bulstrode, the banker, makes important enemies and brings Lydgate down with him. At the end of the story, we're told that Lydgate dies at age 50, and Rosamund re-marries an elder physician. So much for idealism.

We've never had much interest in George Eliot and doubt we will pursue any of her other works. If they're like "Middlemarch," about the only conclusion one might have is that it sure is better living today, with all our problems, than having lived 200 years ago in a sad place like Middlemarch. If you want to immerse yourself in British period drama from the 1800's that has real punch and a happy ending, try "North and South."
More Movie Reviews:
First Review 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Compare prices and read customer reviews for more than one million DVD titles.
Oscar 2005 Winners