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Given that for Russians, Pushkin's poem Eugene Onegin is sort of like
Hamlet, Beowulf, and Lord Byron's Don Juan rolled into one
melancholy tale of lost love and ennui among the gentry, it's surprising Russian
filmmakers have balked at adapting the film. Having taken a stage production of
Hamlet to Russia where it was rapturously received, self-confessed
Slavophile actor Ralph Fiennes must have thought he was making reparation when
he executive-produced and starred in this faithful adaptation of the film. With
Martha Fiennes on board as director, it's something of a family affair with more
than a little of the solemnity one often discovers in "personal projects".
Pushkin's romanticism comes across amply, but little of his ferocious wit or,
inevitably, the authorial voice that makes the poem so compelling, even in
translation. Ralph Fiennes typecasts himself in the title role: his Onegin is
yet another of the actor's wintry, haunted lovers in period dress (this time
early 19th century). The character, a jaded roué from St. Petersburg,
summers in the countryside where he inadvertently wins the heart of the
impulsive Tatyana (Liv Tyler, the girl they book when Gwyneth Paltrow's busy).
Onegin's casual attitude to her love leads to a tragic duel (magnificently tense
and perfectly staged), and years later a chance meeting stirs up feelings of
regret, triumph, and moral queasiness. Tears well in eyes, letters are sent and
read, furs are ruffled in the snow. This is the highbrow end of costume drama:
patrician in its literary purity, and rather admirable in its restraint and good
taste, if a little dull. --Leslie
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- "It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our
hearts, than to put on the cloak of nonviolence to cover impotence."
Mahatma Gandhi (1869 - 1948) |
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| Details
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- Actors: Ralph
Fiennes, Toby
Stephens, Liv
Tyler, Lena
Headey, Martin
Donovan (II)
- Directors: Martha
Fiennes
- Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Full Screen, NTSC
- Language: English
- Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only.
Read more about DVD
formats.)
- Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rating
- Studio: Lions Gate
- DVD Release Date: July 4, 2000
- Run Time: 106 minutes
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Eugene Onegin (Penguin Classics) (Paperback Book)
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