Bright Star

 (2009)


  • User Rating 22 votes
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User Reviews

Indie Film Perfection
Oct 10, 2009
J_Trex - imdb.com
Just saw this at the Ritz East. There wasn't much else playing & this had an 8.1 rating on IMDb so I thought I'd check it out. My instincts were well rewarded because this was one of the best movies I've... Full review
Never truer words were spoken- Where words fail, poetry triumphs. Bright Star, is Jane Campion's romantic ode to John Keats. She conveys desire in an ode, consummation in a sonnet. Intimate as a whisper, immediate as a blush, the film positively... Full review
This film is a masterpiece.
Oct 05, 2009
vmariposa - imdb.com
Each scene, every word uttered by the characters was so beautifully and often wittily crafted that I couldn't help but wish I lived in such a lush world, full of idealism and love of literature, not to mention people who cared... Full review
"Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty"
Oct 04, 2009
Salvador_Sunset - imdb.com
For me, the beauty and loveliness of the film lingers with you long after the credits have ended. Ben Whishaw's performance is understated while also showing the witty, naive, serious and kindhearted qualities of Keats' character. The wittiness of Whishaw's Keats... Full review
The Poet of Film, Fails
Oct 02, 2009
joan - imdb.com
The Poet of Film, Fails Jane Campion has endeared herself to art film lovers with breakthrough films, gorgeous cinematography and inspired imagery. Who can ever forget a tangled Holly Hunter drowning with a piano? As a poet and writer, I was... Full review
The Power of Poetry
Sep 29, 2009
moviemanMA - imdb.com
In Jane Campion's latest film Bright Star, we bare witness to just that. We see the power of one's words and the effect they can have on the people who encounter them, in both a positive and negative light. More specifically,... Full review
Campion captures the sine curve of romantic experience
Sep 27, 2009
Chris Knipp - imdb.com
Keats's romance with Fanny Brawne and final days are brought to lovely life in Jane Campion's new film, Bright Star. He had TB, though it's never named. When he had become very ill, they sent him to Rome. How foolish! Its... Full review
Beautiful cinematography
Sep 26, 2009
Mia - imdb.com
The material was handled differently than I would have by the director. Not much happens in this movie, yet it's the small mundane day to day events that touch the viewer and are the strongest aspect of the film. For example... Full review
Sitting in a packed cinema in Mill Valley, CA watching this film demonstrates that the film experience still exists and that great films can be made. This is a great movie experience because it is so gentle, simple and direct-no stunts-no... Full review
A brighter word than Bright
Sep 23, 2009
- imdb.com
I saw this film tonight, and in my eyes, it is a perfect film. Beautifully acted by all involved, (several times during the film I found myself thinking 'Abby Cornish is amazing!", despite not being a huge fan before), and stunningly... Full review

News

Bright Star begins in 1818, three years before Keats was to die in Italy, aged 25, impecunious and critically unregarded. The film doesn't wail over this neglect - posterity has been the best corrective - but tries to situate him... ... Full Article

Same goes for The Libertine, in which the lascivious life of John Wilmot, the bawdy Restoration poet who pioneered the strategic deployment of the C-word in poesy, is laid before us like the corpse on an anatomist's table. ... Full Article

Quentin Tarantino isn't exactly the touchy, feely type. And he's not usually one for period pieces -- especially of the corset-ripping romantic variety -- unless they involve a badass brigade of Jewish soldiers scalping Nazis, of course. ... Full Article

The Mumbai Film Festival (MFF), organised by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images (MAMI), is back with more foreign films than previous years. You may not want to miss Bright Star, directed by Jane Campion and based on the life... ... Full Article

"Where the Wild Things Are" -- Rated: PG. -- Suitable for: First- or second-graders and up, keeping your child and the following in mind. -- What you should know: This was inspired by Max Sendak's popular book, and while there... ... Full Article

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