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Madame Bovary
A doctor named Charles loves his work very married to a woman at the age of 18 and live in a small country called Univille but their relationship is increasing in failure because of neglecting his wife and left alone most of the time and try to achieve her dreams to find a relationship full of love but show restraint in the first group Of dramatic events in her life.
14 October 1989, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
22 July 1963, Namur, Wallonia, Belgium
20 October 1976, Leeds, England, UK
13 April 1967, Gillingham, Kent, England, UK
1 November 1976, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
3 November 1989, Heywood, Lancashire, England, UK
6 June 1967, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
22 July 1967, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK
June 01, 2016
Incapable of going deeper in its story, the film is a very superficial take on the material. [Full review in Spanish]June 13, 2015
For all the talk of romance, this is a Madame Bovary that's grounded in the real - in the sounds and colors of Emma's world, in its material limitations and splendors.May 05, 2016
It is certainly beautiful... But the story, which follows a remorseless arc, is reduced to episodes that amount to a narrative shorthand and many characters - notably Giamatti's Homais - are hopelessly underwritten.May 20, 2016
By not getting too fancy, Sophie Barthes scores one of the better adaptations with her slightly simplified but reasonably faithful Madame Bovary.May 20, 2016
A faithful adaptation of the mythical novel that stands out thanks to it's great production values. [Full review in Spanish]June 18, 2015
With her thousand-mile frown, Mia Wasikowska was born to play Victorian heroines, though she's a little too intelligent and self-aware for Flaubert's Emma Bovary.May 17, 2016
Mia Wasikowska shows that there is no period character that can resist her. [Full review in Spanish]June 15, 2015
This umpteenth adaptation of Flaubert's classic novel at least chooses its Emma wisely ...June 12, 2015
The Normandy locations are evocative, but director Sophie Barthes compresses Emma's multiyear rise and fall into what seems like a month or so.July 03, 2015
Barthes feels the need to improve on Flaubert, adding and dropping scenes and inventing social metaphors - mainly spiderwebs and corsets.May 25, 2016
Mia Wasikowska isn't that bad, but her character lacks all the necessary layers to make us understand her erratic behaviour. [Full review in Spanish]