Jan A.P.Kaczmarek: Washington Square: film score [SOUNDTRACK]
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Washington Square
- Catherine In The Window
- Catherine And Morris
- Una Vita
- First Kiss
- That Must Be Love
- Lavinia
- No To Morris
- No To Catherine
- Catherine And The Mirror
- Catherine's Nocturne
- Romance Quartet
- Please Wait For Me
- L'absence
- Lavinia And Morris
- Alps
- Reunion
- Unfinished Nocturne
- Despair
- Lullaby
- Father Is Dying
- Tale Of The String
- Please Don't Come Here Again
- Chiami Una Vita
- End Credits
- L'absence Again
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #188496 in Music
- Released on: 1998-05-26
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
FATHER KNOWS BEST...
Washington Square is an engaging period piece, with wonderful
performances to be had by Albert Finney, Maggie Smith, and Ben Chaplin. The only jarring note here is the performance by Jennifer Jason Leigh, who lacks subtlety and is so heavy handed as to be distracting.
This movie closely follows Henry James' novel of the same name. Albert Finney plays a wealthy doctor, Austin Sloper, whose wife died giving birth to their daughter, Katherine, an only child raised by the imposing Doctor Sloper with the assistance of the Katherine's maternal, but silly and vapid Aunt Lavinia, beautifully played by Maggie Smith.
Katherine, a shy and clumsy child, desperately wanting, but lacking, affection from her imperious and distant father, grows up to be a plain faced, graceless, and awkward, young woman. As played by Jennifer Jason Leigh, she is a caricature rather than a fully fleshed character. Her portrayal of Katherine shows her lack of skill as an actress, especially when compared to the finely nuanced performances given by the other actors.
When this clumsy, plain jane is wooed by the dashing, but penniless young hunk, Morris Townsend, she falls hard and wants desperately to marry him. Silly Aunt Lavinia encourages the romance and aids and abets the lovers, curiously fulfilling her own romantic fantasies, while assisting her niece in fulfilling hers. Her father, however, pegs the handsome Mr. Townsend as a fortune hunter, because, he reasons, why else would Mr. Townsend want to marry his graceless lump of a daughter?
Needless to say, what follows is the cat and mouse game Dr. Sloper and Townsend play with each other, as well as with Katherine. Father threatens to disinherit daughter, and daughter swears she will marry suitor, despite father's threats. Suitor equivocates on the issue of whether disinheritance will cool his affections and ardor for Katherine. Does he do so out of love for Katherine or self interest? Suffice to say, while Katherine ends up finally getting some backbone in the end, one must ask who is the the ultimate victor in this drama. In my book, Father wins hands down and has the last laugh from the grave.
All in all, this is a handsome and, for the most part, well acted period piece that will be enjoyed by those who love this genre of film.
An overlooked masterpiece...
Period drama based on the novel by Henry James starring Jennifer Jason Leigh (SINGLE WHITE FEMALE) as Catherine Sloper a young woman who has lived under her father's strict regime for long enough and plans to marry Morris Townsend (Ben Chaplin) a poor wastrel who takes a fancy to her (and her money). Her father (Albert Finney) strongly disagrees and drags her to Europe for 12 months hoping that this will cure her obsession. It dosen't but on her return she finds things are not quite as she left them.
It's a wonderful story and well acted, although the director does not let the actors indulge in the emotional side of their characters and I think this lets the film down slightly. Leigh is excellent - and credit has to go to Chaplin. His portrayl of Townsend is very well done. The only blot on this film would have to be Maggie Smith's New York accent. It is absolutely atrocious! Someone should have fired the dialogue coach straight away! If you can overlook this flaw, the film is a delight to watch.
Very accessible Henry James
I saw this film on TV some months ago, and was really impressed with both the theme and the acting. It's the story of a plain, but sweet girl who will inherit a fortune on the death of her father. She meets an attractive suitor who makes her bloom, but her father thinks he's only after her money... Some James' novels have too many (sometimes unsympathetic)characters, or too convoluted a plot, but this has neither of those. Read the book, and see what a good job director Agnieszka Holland has done, and how well she's stuck to the text. Thoroughly recommended, provided you like period dramas.
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