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Jane Eyre [VHS] [1996]
 
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Jane Eyre [VHS] [1996]

William Hurt , Charlotte Gainsbourg    Parental Guidance   VHS Tape
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
Price: £12.99
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Product details

  • Actors: William Hurt, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Nicola Howard, Sasha Graff, Fiona Shaw
  • Format: Colour, Full Screen, HiFi Sound, PAL
  • Language English, French
  • Aspect Ratio: 4:3 - 1.33:1
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Pathe
  • VHS Release Date: 1 Oct 1999
  • Run Time: 112 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004CTNX
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,883 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

Product Description

After a bleak childhood, Jane Eyre goes out into the world to become a governess. As she lives happily in her new position at Thornfield Hall, she meets the dark, cold, and abrupt master of the house, Mr. Rochester. Jane and her employer grow close in friendship and she soon finds herself falling in love with him. Happiness seems to have found Jane at last, but could Mr. Rochester's terrible secret be about to destroy it forever?

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
31 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
I'm glad I went with the reviews on this one. The actors are true to the story and most of the important bits are included in it when it comes to the build up of the relationship between Jane and Rochester. In all that it does, the film manages it okay(with a few story mixes to involve the Rivers.. see later).

On the down side:
It's just too short!
The story spends about a fifth of the time on Jane's time at Lowood only covering her time as a pupil and spends about ten minutes on her time with the Rivers.

This is the downfall of this film as I always find the long section that follows Jane on her tortuous journey from Thornfield to the Rivers is so painful and heart wrenching and this is completely missed out, plus the fact that she finds family is completely omitted. Again, the pain felt when she finds out about Thornfield in the village is also omitted, leaving it to the viewer to work out Rochestor is blind.

The large plot that sees Rochestor use Blanche Ingram to make Jane jealous at the house party falls completely flat. Yet it holds itself with many other great moments between the two.

What can I say to summarise?
A good film, but there are times when the book is far superior (if only they had followed it properly), and you can almost watch it without reading the book, but there are times when it woud be helpful to have read it in order to fill in the gaps.

Oh, and they missed out the "love calling" bit. Bad idea.

Watch it, but make sure you read the book. Lots.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
By JB
Format:DVD
This 1996 movie was the first adaptation of Jane Eyre that I ever watched and when I did so I was appalled by it. So much of the novel had been left out and I considered William Hurt to be terribly miscast as Rochester. Since then I have watched all the other noteworthy adaptations of the novel, the three short versions of '44, '70 and '97 and the three mini series of '73, '83 and 2006, and I have noticed that there are worse adaptations and worse Rochesters.

This is without doubt the most exquisite Jane Eyre adaptation as far as cinematography is concerned. Director Franco Zerifferelli revels in beautiful long shots of snow falling from a winter sky, of lonely Rochester standing on a rock, and of Jane looking out of the window - but he is less good at telling a story and bringing characters to life. In addition, his script merely scratches the surface of the novel by leaving out many important scenes. As a consequence the film does not show the depth and complexity of the relationship between Jane and Rochester, and sadly it does also not include the humorous side of their intercourse. There are a number of short conversations between Rochester and Jane, each of them beautifully staged, but the couple of sentences they exchange do not suffice to show the audience that they are drawn to each other. We know that they are supposed to fall in love, but we never see it actually happen. The scene in which Rochester wants to find out Jane's reaction to his dilemma by putting his case in hypothetical form before her after the wounded Mason has left the house is completely missing, and the farewell scene, the most important scene - the climax - of the novel is reduced to four sentences. Zerifferelli does not make the mistake other scriptwriters have made in substituting their own poor writing for Brontė's superb lines, neither are crucial scenes completely changed and rewritten, but he makes the less offensive but in the end similarly great mistake of simply leaving many important scenes out. What remains is just a glimpse of the novel, which does no justice to Charlotte Brontė's masterpiece.

The cast is a mixed bag: While Fiona Shaw is an excellent Mrs Reed, Anna Paquin's young Jane is more an ill-mannered, pout Lolita than a lonely little girl, longing for love. The ever-reliable Joan Plowright makes a very likable, but far too shrewd Mrs Fairfaix, and one cannot help feeling that Billie Whitelaw is supposed to play the village witch instead of plain-looking, hard-working Grace Poole. Charlotte Gainsbourgh as the grown-up heroine, however, is physically a perfect choice for playing Jane Eyre. Looking every bit like 18, thin and frail, with irregular, strong features, she comes closest to my inner vision of Jane than any other actress in that role. And during the first 15 minutes of her screen time I was enchanted by her performance. Gainsbourgh manages well to let the audience guess at the inner fire and the strong will which are hidden behind the stoic mask. But unfortunately the script never allows her to expand the more passionate and lively side of Jane's character any further. As a result of leaving out so many scenes and shortening so much of the dialogues, Gainsbourgh's portrayal of Jane must necessarily remain incomplete and therefore ultimately unsatisfactory. This is a pity, as with a better script Charlotte Gainsbourgh might have been as good a Jane as Zelah Clarke in the '83 version.

But while it is still obvious that Gainsbourgh is trying to play Jane, there is no trace whatsoever of Rochester in the character that William Hurt portrays. Hurt, who has proven himself to be a fine actor in many good movies, must have been aware that he was physically and type-wise so miscast that he did not even attempt at playing the Rochester of the novel. His Rochester, besides being blond and blue-eyed, is a soft-spoken, well-mannered nobleman, shy and quiet, slightly queer and eccentric, but basically good-natured and mild. He is so far from being irascible, moody and grim that lines referring to these traits of his character sound absolutely ridiculous. Additionally, during many moments of the movie, Hurt's facial expression leaves one wondering if he is fighting against acute attacks of the sleeping sickness. Particularly in the proposal scene he grimaces like a patient rallying from a general anaesthetic and is hardly able to keep his eyes open. If you compare his Rochester to the strong-willed and charming protagonist of the novel, simply bursting with energy and temperament, it is no wonder that many viewers are disappointed in Hurt's performance. Still, he offends me less than the Rochesters in the '70, '97 and 2006 versions and I would in general rank this Jane Eyre higher than these three other ones. Hurt obviously had the wits to recognise that he could not be the Rochester of the novel and therefore did not try to do so, whereas George C. Scott, Ciaràn Hinds and Toby Stephens thought they could, but failed miserably, and I'd rather watch a character other than Rochester than a Rochester who is badly played. And I'd rather watch a Jane Eyre movie which leaves out many lines of the novel but does not invent new ones than a version which uses modernised dialogues which sound as if they could be uttered by a today's couple in a Starbucks café. Of course this Jane Eyre is a failure, but at least it is an inoffensive one, which is more than one can say of the '97 and 2006 adaptations. I would therefore not desist anyone from watching this adaptation: You will not find Jane Eyre, but at least you will find a beautifully made movie.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Superbly cast; excellently photographed. This adaptation is the definitive version. The subdued passion, heartbreak and ultimate joy is caught to perfection. A 'must have' for any serious Bronte reader.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Mostly faultless
Despite opinion being split over this version I liked it very much. I think Charlotte Gainsbourg, intriguing and unearthly, and William Hurt, perfectly gruff and brooding, were... Read more
Published 1 month ago by HJ
Least Favourite version of Jane Eyre
As much as I admire William Hurt as an actor I was very disappointed in this version of the story. The director messed with the story line too much for my liking - the StJohn... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Sarah Swing
Ideal for GCSE English Lit
This version may be concise but it's ideal for using with pupils who missed the reading of the novel, etc. Read more
Published on 13 April 2010 by S. McCready
A bit of a damp squib...
Firstly, let me begin by saying that I adore Jane Eyre in all its forms both written and filmed - even the adaptations which most people seem to vehemently dislike. Read more
Published on 3 Aug 2009 by L. Doughton
Jane Eyre
I enjoyed this film but I don't think that it is one of the best versions of "Jane Eyre" that I have seen. Read more
Published on 17 July 2009 by Katy Batory
Yawn Yawn Yawn
Whilst I thought this film started promisingly, it was utterly ruined as soon as the adult Jane (Charlotte Gainsbourg)entered on the scene. Read more
Published on 25 July 2008 by G. Currie
Save your money!
I loved the book as a teenager and bought this movie to give myself a reminder of the story. The movie felt poor, how could I had put some many emotions in the characters when I... Read more
Published on 17 Mar 2008 by Grottis
It's all right...
...but it hardly lives up to its billing as the greatest love story of all time. (See fulsome trailer in the DVD extras. Read more
Published on 11 Jan 2008 by Dinky
Abysmal - avoid at all costs
The only reason I gave this adaptation one star is that you can't give none. The book has been butchered, leaving out several important scenes -for example in the book, when Mr... Read more
Published on 30 Oct 2007 by T Anderson
Franco Zeffirelli triumphs with this brilliant adaptation of an...
Franco Zeffirelli's version of Charlotte Brontė's novel Jane Eyre debuted in 1995 and is the third of at least five adaptations made to date. Read more
Published on 17 Oct 2007 by cathy earnshaw
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