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Doubt [Blu-ray]
 
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Doubt [Blu-ray]

 Suitable for 15 years and over   Blu-ray
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (48 customer reviews)
Price: £16.79 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Doubt [Blu-ray] + Sophie's Choice (Special Edition) [DVD] + Silkwood [1983] [DVD]
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Product details

  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, Icelandic, Dutch, Arabic
  • Region: Region B/2 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm
  • DVD Release Date: 6 July 2009
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (48 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001QOGXT6
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 66,148 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Amazon.co.uk Review: It's always a risk when writers direct their own work, since some playwrights don't travel well from stage to screen. Aided by Roger Deakins, of No Country for Old Men fame, who vividly captures the look of a blustery Bronx winter, Moonstruck's John Patrick Shanley pulls it off. If Doubt makes for a dialogue-heavy experience, like The Crucible and 12 Angry Men, the words and ideas are never dull, and a consummate cast makes each one count. Set in 1964 and loosely inspired by actual events, Shanley focuses on St. Nicholas, a Catholic primary school that has accepted its first African-American student, Donald Miller (Joseph Foster), who serves as altar boy to the warm-hearted Father Flynn (Phillip Seymour Hoffman). Donald may not have any friends, but that doesn't worry his mother, Mrs. Miller (Viola Davis in a scene-stealing performance), since her sole concern is that her son gets a good education. When Sister James (Amy Adams) notices Flynn concentrating more of his attentions on Miller than the other boys, she mentions the matter to Sister Aloysius Beauvier (Meryl Streep), the school's hard-nosed principal. Looking for any excuse to push the progressive priest out of her tradition-minded institution, Sister Aloysius sets out to destroy him, and if that means ruining Donald's future in the process--so be it. Naturally, she's the least sympathetic combatant in this battle, but Streep invests her disciplinarian with wit and unexpected flashes of empathy. Of all the characters she's played, Sister Aloysius comes closest to caricature, but she never feels like a cartoon; just a sad woman willing to do anything to hold onto what little she has before the forces of change render her--and everything she represents--redundant. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Product Description

Amy Adams, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Meryl Streep, Viola DavisDirectors: John Patrick Shanley


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
67 of 71 people found the following review helpful
By MT
Format:DVD
I rarely review films and books, especially those I enjoyed, as it is usually a very personal experience, but when to my amazement I found such mixed reviews for what in my opinion is a masterpiece, I felt the need to speak out.

Everyone will have their own opinion in the end, but the negative reviews of this film to date appear particularly misleading (incidentally one of them actually contains spoilers--shouldn't Amazon.co.uk filter these out?), and I feel the need to clarify a few things.

You see, this is NOT a courtroom drama or a John Grisham action thriller. Some of the reviewers seem to have expected this to be the case, since the story revolves around whether a priest is guilty of a heinous crime. But what this film is actually about is what you learn in the process of his persecution by the mother superior.

In "Doubt", people reveal just how far they are willing to go in pursuit of a cause they believe in. Love of God is put to test as human, almost primal urges rear their head. Parents are shown to be willing to make unspeakable compromises. And a young and naive nun learns that little is certain, except eternal doubt.
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31 of 33 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
John Patrick Stanley's film adaptation of his own Pulitzer Prize and Tony award winning play 'Doubt: a Parable' unfortunately did not come up with any Oscars Sunday night but still deserves accolades for it's multi-layered plot, excellent performances and thought-provoking denouement.

The setting of the film at a Catholic school in a largely Irish/American Catholic neighbourhood of the Bronx in 1964 - a year after the deaths of JFK and Pope John XXXIII and the convocation of the second Vatican Council, which boldly sought a rapprochement of the Catholic church with the modern world - emphasises the central conflict of the film between:- (A) The old certainties of the past, as embodied by Meryl Streep's arch-traditionalist, stern, foreboding, ball-point pen hating nun. (B) The ever-increasing uncertainties of the present represented by Patrick Seymour Hoffman's modernist, charming and openly liberal parish priest.

The story is ostensibly a sort of 'whodunnit'? (or rather 'did-he-do-it'?) in regards to allegations of innappropriate relations with children but on a deeper level probes further into the nature of faith in an ever-changing and increasingly secularised world. Is Phillip Seymour Hoffman's character a sexual predator or merely a misunderstood victim? is Meryl Streep's character an overzealous gossip or true believer? there is indeed doubt. The film does not underestimate the intelligence of the audience and allows for several interpretations. Thought-provoking, engrossing and well-acted by a strong cast. A film that is well worth a watch.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By Mrs
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
The script and acting is amazing, I felt no difficulty in immersing myself in the reality of the school. I was taught in an Irish convent school in 70s, where the boys and girls were seperately educated, so the priests had very little contact with girls the way things were organised in our town.

There is such subtlety in how Fr Flynn interacts with the boys. He is positive and encouraging, warm and snarky. Yet the boys all flinch when he thrusts his long fingernails at them. Well all except Donald Miller, the boy under observation. Fr Flynn wants to innovate, Frosty the snowman, have a camping trip. Warning bells!!! Not Frosty, but the camping trip, an ideal occasion of total access to the boys.

Donald's mum hoped that the priest was kind to her son, regardless of his motivation. That sounded cold, until she said his life was in danger if he had to return to his last school or his father thought his son's "personality" had been discovered. The cruelty in that boy's life was barely sketched, but that was a theme that played whenever Sr Aloysius had dealings with children. The children were either a problem that needed correction and they should shut up. The other teachers and nuns were far warmer.

Cue Fr Flynn cuddling Donald in the corridor... he must have felt so secure to do that, either because he was innocent, or because he was in brazenly open and despite confessing to terrible sin "would never feel true regret" in Sr Aloysius' damning phrase.

I am puzzled about why Sr James hid the most telling evidence (the undershirt returned by the priest direct into Donald's locker) - was it inexperience, that she could not infer how the shirt was in his possession? Perhaps had Sr Aloysius been cool on first hearing her fears, Sr James would have had to list all her observations, among them the shirt. When Sr Aloysius immediately jumps to conclusions without any facts, that is very worrying to Sr James who backs off.

But of course Sr Aloysius was not trying to protect a young boy; she is censorious, delighted that she has the means to get rid of Fr Flynn. She never expresses fears that he will go on to abuse other boys when he has moved on. Her Doubt, is not that she was wrong about Fr Flynn, and frankly I am with her instincts there; it may be that she feels guilt that she allowed herself the pleasure of pursuit. Recall the severity of their dinner - the gristle served as a lesson in abjecting oneself. She is not accustomed to obeying others, perhaps she must discipline herself? Where is the Mother Superior of her order? It is she who one would expect her to consult. If she was Mother, she would have been addressed as such.

I knew nuns like Sr Aloysius. Dare to cross them and they are in pursuit of you throughout your career in the school. Yet they love their community, they do good works, they run the school needing only a glance to keep order. No beatings in Sr Aloysius' school did you notice! The experience of waiting outside her office was enough to keep order. Vinegar can be overused though.

A wonderful film that will keep showing new aspects on repeated viewings.
I loved this film for its honesty, the unsentimental gaze on every one of the characters.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Film "Doubt"
Tired of car chases, explosions, sex, strong language etc ? Want a film that will make you think ? Well acted throughout with an unexpected (and ambiguous) ending, "Doubt" is... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mr. W. Greenock
Depersonalisation and intolerance
I agree with Back to Basics, Meryl Streep plays the her part poorly, a shame because she is a good actress, however, this should not undermine the main thrust of argument in the... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Philip C. Hills
One scene wonder - otherwise a mess
This film features one remarkable scene, in which Viola Davis plays a mother standing up for her teenage son's right to be as he is, even if that may mean he's seductive to the... Read more
Published 4 months ago by back to basics
LIFE AT ITS WORST AND AT ITS BEST!
Doubt is one of the most moving films I have ever had the pleasure to watch! This movie is about corruption, sin and wickedness and is a reminder to us, that in the face of evil... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Seano0o
Tense and topical but also entertaining
Heavyweight performances and an intelligent plot working on more than one level carry this story about a very topical and delicate subject. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Shrewlord
would probably make a better stage play
'Doubt' was an interesting movie, with excellent central performances from Streep and Hoffman, but ultimately unsatisfying as there was no resolution, no clarifyication and, dare I... Read more
Published 13 months ago by R. L. Judd
So disappointing
I have been a Meryl Streep fan for years now,so when this dvd came out I thought great! What a disappointment.The story to me is very disjointed and boring. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Mrs. Denise Moore
MEDIOCRE
I expected a lot more from this movie given the great reviews I came across. I think this film was void of a pinnacle point and failed to grip my full attention. Read more
Published 19 months ago by exploreunity
Doubt DVD Review
I received this DVD in the post much quicker than I anticipated so the service was excellent. The DVD looks ok and is still in its original plastic wrapping. Read more
Published on 2 May 2010 by M. Illingworth
Thrown into a backspin
Set in the confines of a Roman Catholic school, somewhere around the early 1960s in The Bronx, New York, this film touches on matters very much affecting the RC Church today. Read more
Published on 28 Mar 2010 by Eileen Shaw
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