Quartet - The Merchant Ivory Collection buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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Features
• Anamorphic
• DVD-Video
• NTSC
In Theaters : 25 October, 1981
DVD Release : 24 February, 2004 |
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Quartet - The Merchant Ivory Collection Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ |
"She ought to sing for her supper."
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The Merchant Ivory film "Quartet" is set in 1920s Paris. Beautiful Marya Zelli (Isabelle Adjani) is left completely destitute when her husband Stephan (Anthony Higgins) is arrested for trafficking in stolen art. He's shipped off to jail for a year, and she's left living in a hotel with no money. A wealthy middle aged married couple, Lois (Maggie Smith) and H.J Heidler (Alan Bates) offer Marya their protection and the use of their spare room.
The first time the Heidlers meet Marya is in a small Parisian cafe when they are introduced by mutual friends. HJ loses no time in groping Marya, and while she appears uncomfortable with the gesture, she fails to stop him or to express distaste. Going back and forth from her hotel to the jail, she visits Stephan once a week, and he presses her to accept the Heidlers' hospitality. Marya is reluctant to do so--probably because HJ has already made his intentions quite clear, but now penniless, urged on by Stephan and pursued by the dogged persistence of the Heilders, Marya finally agrees to move in with the married couple.
The Heidlers are an odd pair. Lois states "I always give way to HJ" and it's soon quite apparent that darling HJ is immensely irresponsible, possessing the emotional maturity of a petulant 5 year-old. The Heidlers' penchant for adding a third person to their marriage has a historical precedent. Apparently, another young girl moved in to their home some years ago. While there she posed for portrait artist Lois, and the girl eventually committed suicide. When HJ first presses for Marya to move into their home, Lois promptly tells him "I think you're just getting bored." And apparently, it's Marya's job to entertain HJ, keeping the couple happy in the process.
The sets are all gorgeous, and the film includes heavy sections of Parisian nightlife. Unfortunately, in spite of the stellar cast, and gorgeous sets, somehow the film fails to do justice to the Jean Rhys novel. The film does not grasp the nuances of character--especially in portraying Marya. This leaves Isabelle Adjani (a fine actress) playing Marya as a sort of passive, ultra naive ninny. The film's treatment of the Rhys novel is unfortunate, and the filmmakers' creative moments tend towards the simplistic (the interpretation of the Heidler's marriage) and the sensational (Parisian culture). Fans of the novel won't be able to resist catching the film, but inevitably, it's a disappointing interpretation--displacedhuman
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