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The End of the Affair | 
enlarge | Director: Neil Jordan Actors: Ralph Fiennes, Julianne Moore, Stephen Rea, Heather-jay Jones, James Bolam Studio: Sony Pictures Category: DVD
List Price: $9.95 Buy Used: $3.60 You Save: $6.35 (64%)
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Rating: 94 reviews Sales Rank: 10464
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 DVD Layers: 1 DVD Sides: 2 Picture Format: Array Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 102 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5 x 0.6
MPN: COLD04745D ISBN: 0767847415 UPC: 043396047457 EAN: 9780767847414 ASIN: 0767847415
Theatrical Release Date: 1999 Release Date: May 16, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Sealed item. Like NEW. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!
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Product Description In london after world war ii novelist maurice bendrix goes to great lengths to destroy and perhaps reclaim his mistress sarah after shed unaccountably left him 18 months before. In a world torn apart by conflict three peoples lives are changed forever by the searing passion of a forbidden love affair. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 03/22/2005 Starring: Ralph Fiennes Stephen Rea Run time: 109 minutes Rating: R Director: Neil Jordan
Amazon.com essential video "This is a diary of hate," pounds out novelist Maurice Bendrix (Ralph Fiennes) on his typewriter as he recounts the lost love of his life in this spiritual memoir (based on Graham Greene's novel) with a startling twist. It's London 1946, and Maurice runs into his achingly dull school friend Henry (Stephen Rea with a perpetually gloomy hangdog expression). Their meeting is brittle, all small talk and chilly, mannered civility beautifully captured by director-screenwriter Neil Jordan (The Crying Game), and it only barely thaws when Henry suggests that his wife, Sarah (the luminous Julianne Moore), may be having an affair. Maurice's mind reels back to his passionate affair with Sarah during the war years, which she abruptly broke off two years ago. Gripped with a jealousy that hasn't abated, he hires a private detective (a mousy, marvelous Ian Hart) to shadow her movements. He prepares himself for the revelation of a rival but instead finds a deeper, more profound secret: "I tempted fate," she writes in her diary, "and fate accepted." Jordan's cool remove captures the unease beneath formal manners but never warms into intimacy during the scenes between the lovers, even while Fiennes and Moore almost explode in repressed emotions, their faces cracking under their masks of civility and their resolve shaking through jittery body language. There's more thought than feeling behind this collision of passion and spirituality, but it's a sincere, richly realized portrait of ennui and rage against God energized by brief moments of shattering drama. --Sean Axmaker
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| Customer Reviews: Read 89 more reviews...
Love! Hate! Straight faces! September 9, 2008 Kona (Emerald City) Writer Maurice Bendrix (Ralph Fiennes) and married Sarah Miles (Julianne Moore) had a love affair for several years until she abruptly ended it. Two years later, Maurice meets her husband who suspects she is carrying on with someone; Maurice hires a private investigator to follow her, and falls in love with Sarah again. This is probably a tear-jerking, steamy, and sentimental love story but I just didn't feel it. Fiennes, Moore and Stephen Rea, as Sarah's husband, play 95% of their scenes in slow-motion, with completely expressionless faces staring blankly into each other's eyes while their stoic voices recite passionate lines. I suppose it's meant to be very sophisticated and posh, but it seemed phony and empty to me. The character I liked best was Parkis, the private investigator, played by Ian Hart. (Note to Harry Potter fans: This movie has Professor Quirrell, Lucius Malfoy, and Voldemort all together!) Parkis was the one who tied up all the loose ends and was the only character who seemed emotionally open and honest. A nice subplot involving his son made me smile at the end, despite the vacuous love story. The excellent WWII-period sets and costumes gave the movie a lot of atmosphere; it was the detached acting style that left me feeling nothing. Also, the story constantly switched from present to flashback making it a bit confusing and the addition of a miraculous, spiritual thread was unnecessary and awkward. I didn't connect with the characters or the love story; 2.5 stars.
'The end of the affair' June 30, 2008 Sylvia A. Price (madison, ct United States) Wonderful movie, but then I was brought up in England during the era so it is very familiar in all aspects. Just adore Ralph Fiennes.
A terrible adaptation and performance March 21, 2008 C. J. Leach (Midwest, United States) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Not long ago I read Graham Greene's wonderful, "The End of the Affair". I was so impressed that I sought out a film version, and was again captivated with the 1955 production starring Van Johnson, Deborah Kerr, and Basil Rathbone. Loving the story and wanting more, I obtained the 1999 version starring Ralph Fiennes, Julianne Moore, and Stephen Rea. What a disappointment. Typical modern Hollywood alteration and cheapening of a great story and truth. If I may expand a bit, in the order of least importance to greatest importance: Julianne Moore is only minimally attractive, and her flat acting performance in this role makes her even less so. The sex and nudity was gratuitous. (Wrapping this piece in a Graham Greene cloak does not make it less the soft core presentation that it is). The WWII England aura seems to have been diminished. Perhaps when the original film was made, memories were fresh . . . now they have faded (like this film). And, finally and most importantly . . . Graham Greene was a spiritual man, in his own fashion. He held a complex but serious theology, which was usually expressed in his written work. This film version, however, must have him figuratively rolling over in his grave. The ending of the story has been substantially altered. In Greene's original version, God's hand moves mysteriously, complexly, but benevolently. The heroine makes painful but righteous ultimate decisions. In this modern adaptation, all is changed. God seems cruel. The players make selfish decisions, falsely painted as "righteous" under the banner of "pursuit of happiness". I was shocked and greatly disappointed when I viewed this. I suppose for many, this is a superior feel-good ending. I thought it was a crude violation of Greene's written masterpiece. Watch this one if you will, but please don't neglect seeing the 1955 film version, or if you are a reader, Greene's novel by the same title.
torrid romance set in war-ravaged london February 28, 2008 Suzyliz (Miami, Florida) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This excellent movie -- released in 1999 and based on the slim novel by Graham Greene published in 1951 -- wholly baptizes contemporary viewers into the cultural context of a time and place that nowadays exists only in the memories of those who were of age during WWII. But even those of us who for the first time encounter Greene's works (whether his novels or the several popular movies based on them) in the twenty-first century can thank God for these reality-saturated tales, which, so much like the stories of the Old Testament, demonstrate that the God who created the universe is not, after all, a prissy protestant church lady, unwilling to soil white gloves in gripping encounters with messy, irrational humans. Graham, who converted to Roman Catholicism as an adult, seems in the stories he tells to be well acquainted with a God who is not too nice for humanity -- not even for the foremost of sinners, including a cynical best-selling and critically acclaimed novelist. In this latest cinematic interpretation of Greene's novel of forbidden love, understated Ralph Fiennes plays the lonely writer who stumbles unwittingly and unwillingly into a relationship with the God of the Bible when he has an extramarital affair with a believer. Beautiful Julianne Moore is the tormented adultress, whose repentance, while it lasts, transforms those around her.
A Glacial look at English Blitz love February 2, 2008 All Red (USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I purposely avoided this film when it was theatrically released.The opinions were too varied for me to care enough to see for myself.So, now that I own the DVD it was time. BURRRRRRR!!!! What a cold and repressed piece of film.It's hard to put into words exactly what was so disconnecting for me about "The End of the Affair";was it the detached performances of Julianne Moore and Ralph Fiennes who are supposed to be passionately and irretrievably in passionate lust for each other during the Blitz of London?;was it the terribly disjointed way in which the script unfolded never allowing me to feel enough sympathy/empathy for any character? was it the terribly cliched dialog that tried to make this film seem as though Bogart and Bergman should be playing the roles? Or was it the immensely disturbing soundtrack of Michael Hyman who insisted on replaying the same infernal "lone theme" throughout this incredibly tedious and cold ,repressed piece of clap? There are more than enough reasons to look elsewhere for a romantic WW2 tragic romance.This was just a tragic film.PASS!
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