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The Human Stain [DVD] [2004]
 
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The Human Stain [DVD] [2004]

DVD ~ Anthony Hopkins
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
RRP: £14.99
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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

The Human Stain [DVD] [2004]
89% buy the item featured on this page:
The Human Stain [DVD] [2004] 4.1 out of 5 stars (12)
£3.98
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The Human Stain 3.8 out of 5 stars (37)
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Product details

  • Actors: Anthony Hopkins, Nicole Kidman, Ed Harris, Gary Sinise, Wentworth Miller
  • Directors: Robert Benton
  • Writers: Nicholas Meyer, Philip Roth
  • Producers: Andre Lamal, Bob Weinstein, Eberhard Kayser, Gary Lucchesi, Harvey Weinstein
  • Format: Anamorphic, PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm
  • DVD Release Date: 1 May 2007
  • Run Time: 101 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0001XLY9C
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 13,159 in DVD (See Bestsellers in DVD)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Given the formidable challenge of adapting Philip Roth's acclaimed novel to the screen, it's a wonder that The Human Stain retains so much of what makes Roth's novel a masterpiece. As adapted by Nicholas Meyer, Robert Benton's film is inevitably a different animal altogether, and it's wide open to charges of miscasting and thematic diffusion. But at its core, this delicate drama succeeds in exposing the sins that stain all of humanity, forcing men like former welterweight boxer and esteemed professor Coleman Silk (Anthony Hopkins) to forsake family and career to conceal his African American heritage. Light-skinned and passing as a Jewish professor of classics in a tony East Coast college, 71-year-old Silk sinks into scandal when an innocent remark is misinterpreted as a racist slur, and this--along with his affair with an illiterate 34-year-old janitor (Nicole Kidman), and friendship with a reclusive novelist (Gary Sinise)--forms the crux of Benton's multilayered inquiry into the oppressive aftershocks of guilt, shame, and mourning, and the effects of judgment (internal and external) on our ability to connect. Roth's novel was one thing, Benton's film is another. Despite differing degrees of success, both are worthy of praise. --Jeff Shannon

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I shall have to read the book now ..., 19 Oct 2006
By Marshall Lord (Whitehaven, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
"The Human Stain" is the film version of a highly acclaimed book by Philip Roth. It is a moving and powerful, if rather sad story. I suspect that it wasn't possible in a normal length film to do justice to all the ideas in the original book, and having watched the film I will now have to read the book to find out.

The film begins with a car crash. Then it jumps back a few months, and you are told that Coleman Silk (Anthony Hopkins) is a distinguished Jewish classics professor, and Dean of a college which he has turned round at the price of making plenty of enemies.

It is five weeks into a new academic term, and Silk is giving a seminar. He notes that two students, who had missed all his previous lectures and seminars, are absent yet again, having failed to attend a single one of his lessons since arriving at the college. He asks if they are real, or "spooks." Never having laid eyes on the individuals concerned, he did not know that they are black. Spooks used to be a rude word for an african-american, so Coleman Silk finds himself accused of racism.

Silk explodes with anger, giving ammunition to the enemies who want an excuse to oppose him, while those he has helped do not dare stand up for him. The irony is that he could have stopped the allegation in its tracks with a truth which he cannot bring himself to share - for he has been living a lie for many years.

The title "The human stain" refers to the impact all of us have on the world around us.

The film is not particularly fast paced, but it is very powerful, and has some excellent acting, particularly from Hopkins as Coleman Silk in old age, Wentworth Miller who plays Silk as a young man, and Nicole Kidman as Faunia Farely, a penniless young woman who he becomes involved with. Other performances worthy of note include those of Anna Deavere Smith, and Ed Harris as Faunia's psychotic ex-husband.

Not a film to watch if you want a "lift" or cheering up. But a good one if your want some powerful and moving drama.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love in winter, 6 Jan 2006
By Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Ooooo! THE HUMAN STAIN offered the potential for so many Oscar nominations: Best Picture, Best Actor (Hopkins & Kidman), Best Supporting Actor (Miller, Harris, & Smith).

Hopkins is Coleman Silk, an aging and respected professor of literature at an idyllic New England liberal arts college, who, in the "now" of 1998, runs afoul of extremist political correctness. He's accused of racism after referring to two students, who've been absent from his class for the first 5 weeks of the term, as "spooks", i.e. ghosts. Silk has never met them under any circumstances, but, as bad luck would have it, they're both Black. Called onto the carpet by the Board, and receiving no support from those who should know better, Coleman angrily resigns. When Silk breaks the news to his wife, she suffers a fatal heart attack. As Coleman puts it, his persecutors killed the wrong person.

On the rebound, Silk meets Faunia Farely (Kidman), who holds down three blue collar jobs, is separated from her abusive husband, a psychotic Vietnam vet named Lester (Ed Harris), and who keeps the ashes of her two dead kids under the bed. Faunia describes her troubled situation as befitting "trailer trash", and carries more baggage than a loaded 747. But Silk is besotted, and embarks on a torrid love affair with the 30-year younger woman. As Silk declares to his writer friend Nathan (Gary Sinise):

"This is not my first love, it's not my great love, but it's my last love". It's love - and great sex - in the winter of Coleman's life. Even Viagra gets a verbal plug.

THE HUMAN STAIN is also a tale of "racial passing", i.e. the process of shifting one's racial identity. You see, Coleman has a secret that he's kept buried for decades. (No, it's not that he's Welsh like Hopkins, but something else.) The film jumps back and forth between 1998 and the late 1940s, when a young Silk (Wentworth Miller) chooses to make the transition and abandon his natural family forever. It's only now, in a last orgasm of sharing with Faunia, that Coleman can unburden himself.

The plot sounds like grist for a maudlin TV soap, but is raised to heights of excellence by extraordinary performances, especially Hopkins and Kidman. Hopkins wore green contact lenses to match Miller's eye color, and the two men synchronized speech and body movement characteristics to make the age transition as seamless as possible. Nicole spent time in shelters for abused women to acclimatize herself to aspects of the role. And a scene where she longs to touch the back of Coleman's neck is Oscar material by itself.

Perhaps the most poignant sequence involves the young Coleman and his mother (Anna Deavere Smith), when the latter suggests what her birthday present might be five years hence. It brings tears to her son's eyes, and perhaps some of those in the audience. Smith's role is not extensive, but certainly memorable.

"Human stain" refers to the indelible mark, however miniscule in the universal scheme of things, that each of us makes on the world and which can't be undone. This film is about Coleman's stain and his coming to terms with it.

At one point, Coleman asks Faunia, battered by life and circumstances, what she wants from their relationship. She responds: "kindness". This is, for each of us perhaps, the greatest truth of all.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sorry to contradict the other ratings., 3 Nov 2004
A director has the perogative to create a film as he sees fit. Just because the pace isn't speedy and rushed and it is 'flat' compared to the other 'action' films on the market, it doesn't make it a bad film.

The film was entirely appropriate to the novel. The pace was slow for a reason. Do you think the events that took place happened at an accelerated rate? NO! The characters lived and suffered and nothing about suffering is fast.

Alot happens in this film but you have to look deeply to find it. If everything in life needs to be served on a silver platter nothing would be interesting. If you pay attention (like you should whilst doing anything) you will notice more. Little jokes etc. shouldn't have to be obvious.

Characters develop, a story about the past unfolds and friendships form. Admittedly the role played by Ed Harris was under-developed and Gary Sinise's role was miss-cast but there have been worse mistakes in other movies that triumphed. (eg. Orlando Bloom's monotone performance in Lord of the Rings.) I completely agree with Jason Hood that Ed Harris' character deserved more screen time, (needed more screen time.)

I don't wish to pick a fight with the other reviewers, but I believe that if you give this movie a chance, you may come away with something. I think that as a movie it is entertaining but if you are not in the mood for a deep, intense film save it for another day. You have to be in the mood for it. If you ever have the time to watch it twice you may see that it's not so bad after all.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended for Wentworth Miller Fans
This is a story of a white man - Coleman Silk - born into a black family, and all the social issues he has to deal with. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Sabiha J. Choudhury

5.0 out of 5 stars Captured me from beginning to end.
Antony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman are just brilliant in their roles, in this movie that should be better known and regarded. Read more
Published 16 months ago by David R. Bishop

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting plot-driven character study
Classics Professor Coleman Silk (Anthony Hopkins), exasperated that two students have yet to show up for his class points to their empty seats and ask rhetorically, "Do they exist... Read more
Published on 8 Mar 2007 by Dennis Littrell

5.0 out of 5 stars Peak performances
This film grabs the viewer from the opening scene. Through a winter's bleak landscape, a car's easy progress along the dark road is enhanced by the sedate pace of the background... Read more
Published on 7 Jan 2007 by Stephen A. Haines

4.0 out of 5 stars hum...
Pro's: Anthony Hopkins is credible; he is not hammy. Good point for Wentworth Miller, he's perfect: both A.Hopkins and W.Miller are charismatic in their common role. Read more
Published on 25 Oct 2006 by Chloe Word

3.0 out of 5 stars Good movie - some vague parts
This movie, with its thought-provoking storyline was quite good. Wentworth Miller was the real star in this movie & gave the best performance playing the younger Coleman Silk... Read more
Published on 14 Sep 2006 by filmfanatical

3.0 out of 5 stars MORE WEAKNESSES THAN STRENGTHS -- TOO BAD
The movie tries to tell the story of Coleman Silk, originally a poor kid from1930s East Orange who has remade himself into something else -- College Dean Silk [played by Anthony... Read more
Published on 6 Mar 2005 by F. Sweet

4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Love Story
Although this movie is not a great one, the DVD is great to have, thanks to the scene selection feature. Read more
Published on 9 Jan 2005

2.0 out of 5 stars Sloooow!!
I found this film very slow indeed!! not much actually happens either. if drama's arent for you, then give this one a miss. Read more
Published on 4 Oct 2004 by G. Gibson

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