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| Jude [1996] | ![Jude [1996]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51D4H2MWMEL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Michael Winterbottom Actors: Christopher Eccleston, Kate Winslet, Liam Cunningham, Rachel Griffiths, June Whitfield Studio: 4 Front Video Category: Video
List Price: £5.99 Buy Used: £0.72 You Save: £5.27 (88%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 4350
Format: Closed-captioned, Dolby, Pal, Surround Sound Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 117 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Discs: 1
UPC: 044004079204 EAN: 0044004379236 ASIN: B00004R6UV
Theatrical Release Date: October 18, 1996 Release Date: February 8, 1999 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: ** The ORIGINAL UK PAL VIDEO From PRIVATE COLLECTION ** "UK Seller - Receive VIDEO Fast!" "Very Good" - "100% Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed" "Postage and Packaging at Low Rate per item whatever the size or weight" "Buy With Confidence" "Will post internationally via Priority Airmail"
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Amazon.co.uk Review This curiously dry adaptation of Thomas Hardy's last novel, Jude is a good example of Michael Winterbottom's inability to make a particularly good film until Welcome to Sarajevo. Christopher Eccleston plays Jude Fawley, a self-educated stonemason who holds the dream of attending university but identifies with the working class. Kate Winslet is enlisted to play his cousin Sue Bridehead, a young woman with suffragette leanings and a position as a teacher's assistant. When the two enter into an illicit union, they are condemned to the margins of society, ultimately resulting in a horrifying tragedy. Winterbottom takes an oddly lean approach to Hardy's deterministic story, which leaves a viewer feeling short on emotion just when one needs it for the from-bad-to-worse third act. Welcome to Sarajevo proved that Winterbottom needs a whole other level of personal involvement to make a film that inspires him. Jude isn't one of those lucky films. --Tom Keogh, Amazon.com
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
"We'll move on again, and again, and again. As long as it takes for the world to change." August 27, 2008 This is the story of a young man who seeks to better himself and achieve what is not expected from a man of his background. The journey seems promising, but after a series of events he is left to salvage dignity and hang on to his pride. The film successfully captures the spirit of inner-torment over unrequited love, and the carefree joy that comes when finally able to express that love.
"Jude" moves from happy optimism to being unbearably painful in a scene which is chilling to watch. Two lovers pay the ultimate price for being a modern couple in an age of conservatism. The actual moment I refer to is underplayed, but by this point we are absolutely convinced by the characters, we know how they think and feel. The intensity of the situation is magnified by the sterling performances of Kate Winslet, and the fabulous Christopher Eccleston.
The back of this DVD proudly announces a digital remastering, but the proof of the pudding is in the eating. Unless that pudding's a DVD, in which case it's in the on screen visuals, and this case, it's disappointing. There seems to be a lot of `floating detail' - maybe a product of over-rigourous noise reduction which removes artefacts from the video to give a smoother picture. If over-done though it can remove details from things such as faces and anything well textured. In well lit scenes this isn't too bad - but in darker scenes the details seem to float around and there's a lot of smearing. Unless you're watching this on a massive screen it won't ruin the experience for you though, but it is a bit annoying. Many scenes are quite blurry too - but I think this is from the initial filming rather than anything to do with the transfer to DVD. It is noticeable though and you find yourself squinting at the screen trying to sharpen the focus.
In a nutshell: A great on-screen portrayal of a classic story. It's all been done before but here it feels fresh and the characters come alive. It is let down though by a less than impressive DVD release. This deserves better treatment, and is a perfect candidate for bonus features - which unfortunately you don't get. A four star film in a two star DVD package.
DVD IS NOT WIDESCREEN! August 13, 2008 This great film receives a major injustice from its DVD transfer. Unlike the U.S widescreen DVD release (out of print, sadly), this UK DVD is not widescreen but "full frame". Since the pan and scan full frame aspect ratio of DVD is not mentioned on the webpage, I assumed this DVD was widescreen. So approximately one third of the screen image is cropped throughout the DVD. What a rip off.
I LOVE THE FILM AND HATE THIS DVD.
Gloriously morbid and bleak December 26, 2007 This film really is a feast for manic depressives! On the one hand, you have the spirited banter between the two leads and the effusive giggliness of Arabella's character and on the other hand, starkly grim scenes of death and birth. For the squeamish, these could be stomach-churning: a pig is gruesomely killed and unceremoniously gutted; bodies are found ashen with death; and, most extraordinarily of all, when Sue (Kate Winslet) is shown giving birth, the bloody head of her baby is visible between her spread-eagled legs. It is fitting that Michael Winterbottom's adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel should shock and horror to this degree: when Jude the Obscure was first published in 1895, it prompted widespread outcry from Victorian readers who denounced it as "coarse beyond belief" and mockingly referred to it as "Jude the Obscene". Aghast at the novel's apparent "insolence and indecency", the Bishop of Wakefield rather hysterically threw it into the fire after reading it. It was to become Hardy's last novel: he subsequently abandoned narrative-writing for poetry.
For its outspoken critique of class inequalities (in particular with regard to university admissions), the institution of marriage, Christianity, and the narrowness of women's social role, Jude the Obscure is today regarded as radical and a classic. Played with panache by a 20-year old Winslet, Sue Brideshead is a paradigmatic New Woman of the 1880s and 1890s - her very surname reflects the conflict between her headstrong nature and the social expectation that she should marry. Christopher Eccleston makes for a sterling Jude: a Dorset countryman and stonemason, angrily frustrated about his rejection from Christminster, who is tolerant of his authoritarian Aunt (June Wakefield), steadfastly honourable in marrying the supposedly pregnant Arabella (Rachel Griffiths), a pigfarmer's daughter, and warmly supportive towards his true love and nemesis, Sue (especially in the scene when they first make love). Ross Colvin Turnball also deserves a mention as the touching and melancholy son as do Eduardo Serra's beautiful cinematography and Adrian Johnston's musical score.
This film is not, however, flawless. There are quite a few implausibilities: Arabella's exit from Jude's life is inexplicably abrupt; when the young Jude is discovered feeding black crows which he is meant to scare away, the farmer pounces on him in a huge field that was empty a few seconds before; and Arabella, too, is a considerable way off, washing pig innards in a stream, when she is supposed to have been able to correctly aim a pig's heart at Jude, who is seen reading Latin in woodland. Hossein Amini's script is sometimes too modern in its vocabulary as well ("Well, you're confrontational!" says Sue at one point and at another "I'm intellectualising, aren't I?").
Jude is nevertheless a brilliantly unsanitized, emotionally intense film that is sombre and tragic - but not without light.
For fans of: Breaking the Waves, The Cement Garden, The Piano, Bleak House, Dancer in the Dark
Film 5 stars or more, UK DVD just 2!! Get the German DVD on amazon.de August 30, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
A short synopsis will follow below. I will start with the most important information first: This film is cut! It is in a full screen 4:3 format whereas the original theater version is 2.35:1 You can however buy the original uncut version on amazon.de : "Herzen in Aufruhr" a Universal DVD (but what an awful title). It is in English (with only German subtitles - but easily removable) and dubbed into German. The picture is clear and crisp. Worth the additional shipping costs. On the movie. A wonderful sad love story based on Thomas Hardy's classic novel. Beautiful! Terrific camera work, great acting. Those who think the movie is not the book, well, sure it isn't. A film needs other storytelling and I think the critics should leave a director and his crew the freedom of their own interpretation. Jude (Christopher Eccleston - terrific) is a stonemason who is eager to learn, to read. He is briefly married to a local girl but soon discovers he wants more of life than what the situation can provide. He moves to Christminster to be closer his beloved scholars. There he meets his cousin Sue (Kate Winslet - marvellous) and falls deeply in love with the lovely but very different and unconventional young woman. Society rejects their love and pushes them into tragedy.
Heartfelt performances January 23, 2006 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
I've read that this was meant to be a breakthrough film for Christopher Eccleston and audiences stayed away. They missed a classic. I did see this on its release and was blown away by it and always am when I watch it again. Not every film has to have a happy ending and Jude won't give you that but then that's not the point. The imagery is stunning and Christopher Eccleston delivers a compelling and emotive performance. He is simply awesome. One of the best films I have ever seen.
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