Anthony Hopkins Movie:

A Dolls House




Click here for more detailed information about the
Anthony Hopkins movie:

'A Dolls House
'




   Anthony Hopkins

  Pictures
  Posters
  Movies
  Books
  News
  Bio
  Movie Trailers
  Desktop
  Screensavers
  Wallpapers
  On TV

  Celebrity Movies




Anthony Hopkins Movie:
A Dolls House



Movie
A Doll's House
A Doll
List Price: $14.98Label: MGM (Video & DVD)

Salesrank: 6922

Released: March 4, 2003
Our Price: $6.99
Used Price: $9.00
MPAA Rating: G (General Audience)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Color
  • DVD-Video
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Claire Bloom
  • Anthony Hopkins
  • Ralph Richardson
  • Denholm Elliott
  • Edith Evans
  • Editorial Review:
    A woman's struggle to have her voice heard in a man's world is "startlingly moving" (The Wall Street Journal) in this cinematic adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's famous play. "Superior performances" (The New York Times) by Claire Bloom (Crimes and Misdemeanors) and Oscar®winner* Anthony Hopkins (Hannibal) set the stage for an engrossing and remarkable drama.Nora (Bloom) will do anything to please her authoritarian husband Torvald (Hopkins). Per Torvald's instructions, Nora focuses on such womanly disciplines as dancing and taking care of babies whilehe sees to all the affairs of money. But when a past financial mistake comes back to haunt Nora, and Torvald finds out, the result is an explosion of fury and a shocking revelation that changes the course of the entire family forever. *1991: Actor, The Silence of the Lambs

    Description of A Doll's House:
    This superb version of Henrik Ibsen's classic play A Doll's House stars Claire Bloom (Brideshead Revisited, Charly) as Nora, a sweet and lively but frivolous woman whose puritanical husband Torvald (Anthony Hopkins, The Silence of the Lambs, The Elephant Man) loves her but doesn't take her seriously. As Torvald assumes a new position as a bank manager, an old debt of Nora's intrudes upon their happy life and reveals secret sides of both husband and wife. The play has been skillfully turned into film, tightening the action and providing the opportunity for intimate performances from an outstanding cast that also includes Sir Ralph Richardson (The Fallen Idol, Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan), Dame Edith Evans (Tom Jones, The Importance of Being Earnest), Denholm Elliott (Raiders of the Lost Ark, A Room with a View), and other topnotch British actors. --Bret Fetzer

    A Doll's House Reviews:
    Review of Henry Ibsen's "A Doll's House" Starring Claire Bloom 1 Star Review
    2008-05-28 - I was not even able to view this item, let alone review it, as the DVD kept showing "Invalid Region" and would not play on my UK system. I think I should have been told about this as my address was clearly in the UK and Not USA or Canada. I was therefore disappointed with my purchase and lost money on it.A Doll's House

    Bloom to Hopkins to Richardson 5 Star Review
    2007-05-23 - Ibsen's "A Doll's House with the superb acting of Claire Bloom, Anthony Hopkins and Ralph Richardson. Hubby(Hopkins) dominating and authoritarian in his manner commands his wife lead a perfect and errorless existence. One minor transgression on her part and Hubby goes ballistic. Knowing that her live in almost servant status in the household will end with nothing changing, nothing getting better, she bolts the abode to find her identity and Daddy mind the Baby, much to his consternation. Alls well but the Wife's gone ?

    Worth Showing 5 Star Review
    2007-05-08 - Anthony Hopkins is wonderful as Torvald capturing both the insecure man and the dominating husband. The film is very close to the text. The director staged more aggression from Torvald in the final scene, but my students all agreed that even that, was true to his character and the integrity of the story.

    A Doll's House, Seriously 5 Star Review
    2006-11-24 - This 1970s production of Ibsen's classic play is well worth the viewing -- it's a solid and believable -- if unsensational -- reading of one of the most famous plays in literature -- and one of the key documents in feminism. The total lack of gimmickry and straight interpretation work in its favor -- A Doll's House is one of the canonical works that doesn't need to be updated. Claire Bloom & Anthony Hopkins (the latter shockingly young) support this production with subtle, nuanced, powerful performances. Denholm Elliott is especially good as Krogstad and Ralph Richardson is moving as the dying Dr Rank ("Thanks for the light!") This version of A Doll's House makes a strong argument for tragic plot patterns which have been banished by Hollywood. My Islamic female students responded positively to this play in DVD. I only wish there were more works available in DVD of this calibre.

    Excellent satire played straight 3 Star Review
    2006-08-22 - Director Patrick Garland's interpretation of Ibsen's famous social satire 'A Doll's House,' while competent and loyal to the source material, lacks effect, I think, mainly for its needlessly dry, Victorian take on a vital, perpetually contemporary theme: the systematic marginalization of those who resist the roles assigned to them by the prevailing mores and conventions of society. Missing in this production is the spirit of Ibsen's wit, which I believe would help us chuckle sympathetically, rather than scowl from a distance, at the vain hopes, hypocrisies and excesses of the playwright's bourgeois set staged in the first two acts, thus providing a much broader context, dramatically speaking, for fleshing out the universal relevancy of the poignant but potentially period-bound subject matter revealed in the third. Ironically, the film's earnest attempts to portray the play's events and characters so literally, so BBCeriously, ultimately work against it and by the final scene the whole exercise seems to have been reduced to a rather dull and dour polemic proposing feminism as an imperfect, last-ditch remedy for 19th century social injustice. Hopkins turns in a skillful but too-restrained performance as the phallocentrically rigid and self-admiring banker/husband Torvald, and Bloom (probably herself over-mature for the role) comes across as too wise and conniving to be believed as the flighty doll-wife Nora. All that having been said, though, the movie is well done. The sets are rich and befitting the era; the actors, however possibly miscast the principals (I'd like to have seen Albert Finney and Susannah York take a crack at the time), are all technically first-rate; and the story, even told as it is, without a hint of caricature, is engaging and paced efficiently by the director.






      Don't forget to check out other celebrity movies:  
    Christina Ricci Movies
    Summer Glau Movies
    Rose McGowan Movies
    Amber Benson Movies
    Dwight Yoakam Movies
    Michelle Williams Movies
    John Cusack Movies
    Sophie Marceau Movies
    William Shatner Movies
    Julia Stiles Movies
    Lucy Liu Movies
    Famke Janssen Movies
    Aidan Quinn Movies
    Whitney Houston Movies
    Julia Roberts Movies
    Beverly DAngelo Movies
    Jean-Claude Van Damme Movies
    Clive Owen Movies
    Kate Hudson Movies
    Minnie Driver Movies
    Jennie Garth Movies
    Natalie Portman Movies
    Eva Green Movies
    Kate Beckinsale Movies
    Heidi Klum Movies
    Eddie Cibrian Movies
    Mira Sorvino Movies
    Reba McEntire Movies
    Keira Knightley Movies
    Dennis Hopper Movies
    Rebecca Gayheart Movies
    Orlando Bloom Movies
    Alexis Bledel Movies
    Jennifer Morrison Movies
    Rachel Weisz Movies
    Elizabeth Hurley Movies
    Alyssa Milano Movies
    Bruce Willis Movies
    Andie MacDowell Movies
    Ally Sheedy Movies