Video&Audio Camera&Photo DVD Movies
The Object of Beauty dvd movie.
Home » DVD Movies » Actors/Actresses » J » Other B » Jeremy Sinden

Other B • Jerry Hauck
Other B • Jan Rubes
Other B • Jim Youngs
Other B • Jessie Keosian
Other B • Jack Pennick
Other B • John Pyper Ferguson
Other B • James Faulkner
Other B • James Hazeldine
Other B • Jerry Swindall
Other B • John Cassini
Other B • John Altamura
Other B • Jad Mager

The Object of Beauty
buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
The Object of Beauty List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $9.98

Features
 Closed-captioned
 Color
 DVD-Video
 NTSC

In Theaters : 12 April, 1991
DVD Release : 18 June, 2002
[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] DVD : Usually ships in 24 hours
The Object of Beauty description
The director Michael Lindsay-Hogg has a name that sounds British despite the fact that he is a New Yorker by birth. Maybe that association derives from the fact that he's primarily helmed television films--segments of Brideshead Revisited, for example, as well as a pile of music videos for English bands like the Who and the Rolling Stones. One of his few ventures into feature filmmaking (another was the little-seen Frankie Starlight) is the 1990 film The Object of Beauty, which also looks, sounds, and feels British in sensibility. The film is set in a tony London hotel, the weather is England-dreary, and the clothes (when the actors are wearing them) are tweedish and woolly in appearance. And the story is essentially repressed and internal save for the brash American performances of John Malkovich and Andie MacDowell, who play a couple living way above their limited financial means. When Jake (Malkovich) bottoms out in a business deal, he urges Tina (MacDowell) to sell her little Henry Moore sculpture, an object of great beauty. Such beauty, in fact, that a young mute hotel maid decides to steal it for her own. The actress Rudi Davies, who plays the maid, steals more than the Moore, however. She sneaks the film out from under Malkovich and MacDowell, who was just coming off of her sex, lies, and videotape acclaim, and who is quite good here as well. The Object of Beauty is too subtle in its message--Jake and Tina lose their last monetary chance and in penury begin to discover who they are as people--to let us care about such a pouty pair, and the "hilarious mix-ups and mayhem" that the film promises are, in actuality, tame and trite. --Paula Nechak
The Object of Beauty Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥♥ Clever and somewhat satisfying
Here's a real clever little comedy about vacuous people and a stolen piece of art that turns into a morality tale.

John Malkovich and Andi McDowell -- who both bare their backsides as well as their souls in this flick -- are a couple escaping something and living in London far beyond their means. As a way to resolve this they hatch a plan to swindle an art dealer with an expensive trinket that looks like a Hurst shifter from the 1970s.

The little mystery about deceit, swindling and lost souls becomes much more than this when an attendant at the hotel where the pair live decides she is in love with the piece of art -- and takes it home. What follows is conundrum after conundrum for a half-dozen people, including all the principals, told in a very witty and funny style.

Lolita Davidovitch steals scene after scene as the deaf mute that makes up rooms in the hotel and makes off with the object of beauty, which she says speaks to her. Everyone gets theirs in the end, as the small diversion of a movie concludes with its characters exiting with less than they arrived.

This movie is good fun that delivers rewards to attentive viewers far bigger than its ideas.
  1     2     3