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The Human Stain
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Directed by Robert Benton.
For his first film since 1998's Twilight, acclaimed director Robert Benton helmed this tense drama written by Fatal Attraction co-scribe Nicholas Meyer and based on the novel of the same name by Philip Roth. Set in the late '90s at the height of the Clinton sex-scandal, The Human Stain stars Anthony Hopkins as Coleman Silk, a respected professor at a New England college who suddenly finds his life unraveling after a comment he makes about some African-American students is misinterpreted as a racial slur. As the scandal heats up, Nathan Zuckerman (Gary Sinise), a writer researching a biography of Silk, begins to dig deeper and deeper into Silk's life. Eventually, matters are made worse when an affair with a young married janitor named Faunia Farley (Nicole Kidman) is exposed. But amid the controversy, Silk must struggle to keep his greatest secret, a secret he's held for the majority of his life, from becoming public. Ed Harris, who previously worked with Benton in 1984's Places in the Heart, also stars. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
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joem18bjoem18b Re: Top Five Movies Regarding O ...
by joem18b in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"Thanks! I agree that the current focus on gross receipts from the multiplex in the first two weeks of distribution has created the demographic monster that is Shrek3/POTC3/Spiderman3.Having said that, and speaking as someone who is over 60, I hate the idea that I might relate more easily to The Human Stain and Iris than to Rocky. Hope it's not true, for me or for all the other geezers. (Btw, I had the notion that older viewers experienced a greater resonance vis a vis Brick than teen viewers did, because of the noir vibe, as opposed to a typical teen-movie vibe.) Some movies that might perk up the geezers (and not Proof, with yet another character slipping off into dottiness): The Mother - Grandmother gets it on with Daniel Craig. Yes!The Queen - Royal geezersOld Man and the Sea - Healthy activities for the older citizenThe Mighty McGurk - Forget Rocky. Beery still has it at 62.Propero's Books - At 87, Giegud, surrounded by naked flesh " [More]
JimBellJimBell Re: Top Five Movies Regarding O ...
by JimBell in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"Yes, the key distinction is between movies "for/about" seniors and movies that seniors might like regardless of who the movies are made for or about. The idea behind my breakfast partner's distinction was that movies today generally aimed for a young demographic and very few movies had in mind his demographic. The demographic is only one of the many factors making a movie seem "good." If the movie is about someone like me, I can identify easily, and the movie can get on with all the other elements. But if the movie is about someone far removed from my ken--for example, Japanese street kids--I and the movie have to do considerable work before the movie seems "good" to me. We know Hollywood creates and markets movies by demographics, but I don't think we're simply falling into their commercial perspective when we talk demographics. I think that just as people in their late teens often take to Brick easily, just as kids are easily rivoted to Nemo's misadventures, so pe ... " [More]
JimBellJimBell The Human Stain
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"The Human Stain (2003) is loaded with brilliant talent but is disliked by most reviewers (it gets a dismal 41% fresh tomatoes when the cut-off for a watchable movie is 60-65%). I really liked it. So let’s start sorting things out. A major criticism—which, not incidentally, shows how erudite film critics are—is that the movie is not nearly as good as the Philip Roth novel. So we should set to one side all those people who have read the book. I haven’t and never will—and this goes for the vast majority of people in North America. If you have, don’t see the movie—even though some astute film critics such as Andrew Sarris say that it does the novel justice. If you haven’t read Philip Roth’s great novel, will you like the movie? Your chances of liking the movie are good if you can identify with the following: Tragedy—The old classics professor (Anthony Hopkins) initially seems to have lived a cushy life, but as the flashbacks ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Few titles convey unspecific malaise as well as The Human Stain, and few films address that malaise with such enviable starkness. Director Robert Benton brings to bear a career's worth of exploring the complexity of human relationships, and the top-to-bottom stellar cast backs him up nicely in a film that flew under the radar, but shouldn't have. Anthony Hopkins may not be far afield from his typical stately intellectual, but Nicole Kidman gives a harrowing demonstration of her range in the role of a dead-end divorcée, and Ed Harris exudes frightening menace as a war veteran whose instabilities might manifest themselves in any way, at any time. Not only does each of the main characters -- who include Gary Sinise as a withdrawn cancer survivor -- get enough screen time to struggle with their very different and very personal injuries, but a healthy stretch of Nicholas Meyer's adroit screenplay delves into the distant past, seamlessly. It's in this portion that the film develops a new, richer layer of meaning that couldn't be divined from either the trailers or the casting of the actors. Yet the film's present tense is also dense with currency and insight, smartly set during the Monika Lewinsky scandal as a means of criticizing our guilt-by-accusation society. That Hopkins' professor could be ruined over his correct usage of a term that's been bastardized into a racial slur echoes several prominent real-world instances of political correctness gone haywire. Although perhaps a little thematically obvious, setting the film in perpetually wintry conditions reminds a viewer of other powerful films involving emotional scarring, such as Affliction or The Ice Storm. The Human Stain is well worthy of joining their ranks. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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