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Lady Chatterley [2007] [DVD]

4.2 out of 5 stars 66 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Marina Hands, Jean-Louis Coulloc'h, Hippolyte Girardot, Hélène Alexandridis, Hélène Fillières
  • Directors: Pascale Ferran
  • Writers: Pascale Ferran, D.H. Lawrence, Pierre Trividic, Roger Bohbot
  • Producers: Gilles Sandoz, Kristina Larsen
  • Format: PAL, Dolby, Digital Sound, Widescreen, Subtitled
  • Language: French
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Artificial Eye
  • DVD Release Date: 14 April 2008
  • Run Time: 162 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (66 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0016VBXDA
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 17,509 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Award-winning Fench adaptation of DH Lawrence's controversial classic about sexual awakening. Trapped in a passionless marriage to an invalid husband (Hippolyte Girardot) in whose country estate she is isolated, the aristocratic Constance (Marina Hands) finds solace in the taciturn form of gamekeeper Parkin (Jean-Louis Coulloc'h). Despite their different backgrounds and initial disinterest, Parkin unlocks in Constance a previously undiscovered desire, while she coaxes him back from his self-imposed solitude.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
I saw this film at an arts film venue in Bristol and was kept gripped by the plot, characters and filming. The film is faithful to the book and is beautifully crafted with careful attention to details such as the period costumes and with stunning shots of the countryside and landscape throughout the seasons. The nudity and sex is, of course, present, but is very tastefully done. It is a relatively long film but such cinema craftsmanship makes it well worth watching.

Films like this only come along once in a while.

Highly recommended.
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have just seen this. at the beginning it said: based on the novel 'john thomas and lady jane'. having never heard of such a book, i thought this was a little joke by the film makers, referring to the names the couple give to their parts in the book.

i therefore watched it as a version of 'lady chatterley's lover'. i observed that the gamekeeper's character was quite different from the book, as were various other details, and in a big way, the end. nevertheless, i was quite prepared to accept all this, in spite of being a fan of the book, as i accepted the makers' words that this was 'based on'. in fact i quite enjoyed the differences i have already cited, in this version. and the gradually developing affair is beautifully handled and portrayed.

filmically, largely sans intrusive musical score, and taken at a slow burn through wonderful images of nature, it was a pleasure.

subsequently, i discovered that there really is a second book, by lawrence, by this name and containing the differences that appear in the film!

so all the negative reviews here, mainly posited on the dissimilarity to 'lady chatterley's lover', are out of order on two counts. (being 'based on', and even actually a different book.)

as for the complaints about the characters not being 'beautiful' enough - puh-lease! this minor escape from the media body police was very welcome.

and adjacent to this, the complaint that he wasn't attractive enough to warrant her response - again, puh-lease! she was a passionate woman, living without sex and the touch of a man, his body turned her on (her, dear viewer, it didn't have to turn you on), and he was the only feasible sexual prospect in her world! so - a bit fanciful in either version, but it is fiction, and beside that, sex can be a powerful drive to strange/ dangerous behaviour.
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By technoguy VINE VOICE on 30 Sept. 2009
Format: DVD
I must admit I liked this French version of DH Lawrence's scandalous late novel.The female director hasconcentrated on the countryside and the wonders of nature.So thankful this was not soft porn as in the Bean-Richardson film or the Emanuelle influenced version.It is a long film but I was never bored as the cinematography is beautiful,the sex grows naturally out their more frequent meetings,centred around the gamekeeper's hut,and it is never lubricious and always tastefully done.Marina Hands is just right,not too eyecatchingly attractive,but her undemonstrative looks seem to bloom with the spring season.Parkin(Mellors in LCL) is a little taciturn and not immediately magnetic, but he did come across as sincere,believable and trusting,a man of the earth with a capacity to be tender.The countryside did seem similar to Nottinghamshire.Clifton was a little too tame as in the novel he was a vitriolic, class-ridden character.

Why do the French always deal with sex with such consummate ease without a trace of titilation?I just think they are more adult and Lawrence was done justice through this French filter.Incidentally I don't know what John Thomas and Lady Jane changes from the original published novel but it seemed to enhance them as people.LCL was after all one of Lawrence's lesser novels but was meant to be a major attack on industrialization with Constance finding renewal through her individual sexuality,which overturned the older social order,established as it was on wealth and aristocracy and a hierarchical class system.
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The films' title, Lady Chatterley is somewhat deceiving , as this is from the lesser known book by D.H.Lawrence called, John Thomas and Lady Jane and to discerning cinephiles, an absolute treat for the senses. Each shot is meticulously planned ,but with an impromptu feel, as if we are secretly observing the unravelling, sensual awakening of their love story. The most poignant and beautiful moments are when the director Pascale Ferran, allows the dialogue to submit to the silence of their intimate moments; to the wonder , intensity and excitement of nature, being alive and to ultimately question your entire existence because of the way someone makes you feel. Buy the 2 disc version if you fall in love with every aspect of this film, as the crew and protagonists, take you on the journey through their eyes, that created this marvelous gem. Unforgettable.
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Lawrence's famous story of Lady Chatterley and her lover is given a fine Gallic twist here (English names and place names, French language) by a French production team. The narrative is actually based on an earlier draught of the novel called John Thomas and Lady Jane, the title a veiled sexual reference in English slang that Lawrence was probably wise to change.

Lady Constance Chatterley (played beautifully by Marina Hands, an Anglo-French actress) is pure, guileless, warmhearted and sensitive. These qualities deepen our interest in her the more we see and feel her isolation and loneliness at Wragby Hall, the estate of her husband Sir Clifford Chatterley. Her compassion for Sir Clifford, a former officer wounded and paralyzed in The Great War, is real. She attends to him daily by helping how she can, dining with him, reading to him, bathing him. She is, among other things, young, beautiful, feminine, gentle and patient. He loves to see her and be in her calming, cheering, charming presence. She knows this and accepts her role devotedly. He was disabled before she married him, so the role of supportive wife is evidently what she wanted.

But time passes and a certain tension begins to build in her. Thereafter it also builds between them. The platonic love of devotion that she thought would sustain her gradually cannot. Her body is whole, healthy, fertile and voluptuous, whereas his is disfigured and emaciated. The cause of this tension is the presence of another man on Sir Clifford's property, the gamekeeper Parkin (known as Mellors in the final version of the novel). Parkin is Sir Clifford's opposite. He is virile and earthy. He has strong shoulders and hands. He chops wood, hammers nails, shoots rabbits and pheasants. Connie sees this and also sees his character.
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