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    Washington Square

    Washington Square
    Director: Agnieszka Holland
    Actors: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Albert Finney, Maggie Smith, Ben Chaplin, Judith Ivey
    Studio: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $9.99
    Buy Used: $2.52
    You Save: $7.47 (75%)



    New (26) Used (25) Collectible (1) from $2.52

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 43 reviews
    Sales Rank: 29306

    Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language)
    Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
    Region: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 115 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

    MPN: D17632D
    UPC: 717951003423
    EAN: 0717951003423
    ASIN: B000065V3V

    Theatrical Release Date: October 10, 1997
    Release Date: September 3, 2002
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Similar Items:

      • The Age of Innocence
      • The House of Mirth
      • The Inheritance
      • The Buccaneers
      • The Heiress (Universal Cinema Classics)

    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    She must choose between her fathers fortune.. Or the man she loves. Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 09/03/2002 Starring: Jennifer Jason Leigh Jennifer Garner Run time: 115 minutes Rating: Pg Director: Agnieszka Holland

    Amazon.com
    In biographies written before 1990, Jennifer Jason Leigh claims to have been born in 1958. Recently, she's changed that to 1962. In either case, she definitely looks a bit odd in this 1998 release playing a 20-year-old opposite the youthful Ben Chaplin. Even stranger is the fact that she's been cast as the ugly girl; after all, she was voted one of America's 10 most beautiful women by Harper's Bazaar. Still, this film captures to a T the Henry James novel on which it is based. The story concerns Catherine Sloper, a 19th-century heiress whose father disapproves of the man she loves. In a twisty plot, questions are raised about both her father's and her suitor's motives, and Catherine must untangle the connections between love and money. This provides fodder for Henry James's critiques of the shallowness and sexism of his society. Some find James's work stiff, self-important, and a bit dull, while others see him as the most astute social critic of his time, so your enjoyment of this film may be a matter of taste. But it's definitely a period piece done right, which is to say that it fully captures its era, and never stoops to anachronisms that would interrupt the viewer's sense of an older, crueler world. --James DiGiovanna


    Customer Reviews:   Read 38 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars It will make you think   June 17, 2009
    Jane Beckwith (Indianapolis, IN USA)
    I saw this movie about five years ago and liked it, but was a bit disappointed in the ending. I'm a big fan of movies based on books by Jane Austen, so I'm used to everything working out in the end. Recently I viewed "Washington Square" a second time and found it extremely compelling and thought provoking (as well as being entertaining). Catherine and Morris are complex characters and you never really know exactly what they are thinking or what their motivations truly are. I think Morris wanted Catherine's money, but I'm not convinced that he was simply a fortune hunter. I think he felt like he and Catherine could make each other reasonably happy and he wouldn't have to toil for his living, which he seemed to think was beneath him. After the trip abroad, why did Catherine refuse to ask her father again for his consent as Morris obviously wanted her to? She was willing to risk losing Morris in order not to beg of her father. Perhaps she knew it was pointless, but it seemed to me that she just flat out refused to even try. When Morris says "Yes, I wanted you and I wanted your money, is that so horrible?", I found myself sympathizing with him--was it so horrible to want both? After all, he doesn't say "I never wanted you, I only wanted the money." At one point the married aunt says something to the father along the lines of "you've worked all your life for your fortune, can you not give it to Catherine and allow her to have it in a happy state." But the father isn't willing to do that--I don't think simply because he views Morris as a fortune hunter, but also because he harbors deep resentment and refuses to see Catherine happy when he was denied happiness due to his wife dying in childbirth. It's wonderful to watch a movie where the main character evolves and that happens with Catherine in this film. She is a much changed person in a span of eight to ten years. Another viewer may read this review and feel very differently about the happenings of the story. That is what is so compelling about this film--it forces you to think and it certainly makes you feel.


    4 out of 5 stars Very fine piece of acting   June 10, 2009
    Rodney M. Pyne (sydney,australia)
    Jennifer Jason Leigh's performance as Catherine Soper in this film version of Henry James' "Washington Square" is one of the great acting cameos of the 1990s.Cruelly exposed to her father's psychological abuse,we see her undergo agonies of low self-esteem and self-loathing until,in the movie's final stages,the worm turns.It is this transformation at the end of the film that leaves us dwelling upon what has preceded it.In addition to the cold downputting by her father,played convincingly by Albert Finney,Catherine suffers yet again from the exploitative manoeuvres of her aunt and,last but not least,by her supposed "amour",Maurice Townsend,played by Ben Chaplin.His performance rises above its earlier Uriah Heep awfulness as he displays the cold and selfish innermost layers of his heart.In a world where she is constantly treated as a tool of the male sex,Catherine's ultimate response is devastatingly shown at the end.At least she has become her own person but the cost has been high and she will never,we think,be able to open up again to any displays of human warmth.
    The recreation of late C19 New York is a feast for the eyes in this production.The house in Washington Square exhibits well the mental tidiness of the times.It's built on a wealthy,large scale but its many spaces reflect the coldness that characterises the running of family life in its big,empty rooms.The costumes,the food,the music: all underlie the strict mores of the genteel set of that time.There is little room here for big warm fires and happy partying and a daughter must do what others decide for her.
    This production is every bit as good as the earlier Joan Fontaine/Montgomery Clift version,in black and white.And there is nothing in the earlier version to compare with this brilliant tour de force of Jennifer Jason Leigh.She deserved the highest award in acting for this memorable role.



    5 out of 5 stars excellent print   March 5, 2009
    Tom Loughridge (St George Island, FL)
    An excellent print of a very enjoyable movie. The print quality is most important to me.


    5 out of 5 stars WASHINGTON SQUARE   September 23, 2008
    Country Gal (Illinois)
    I have both versions of this movie; the original being
    "The Heiress" with Olivia deHavilland, but Jennifer Jason Leigh was made for this role. Excellent cast, excellent film!!



    5 out of 5 stars DVD: Washington Square   March 17, 2008
    Monica (Mesa, AZ)
    Washington Square is a remake of The Heiress, which starred Olivia De Havilland and Montgomery Clift in 1949. Amazon.com was the only place I could find this DVD. Jennifer Jason Leigh is superb as the lonely young woman in search of happiness, and Albert Finney is hateful as her overbearing father who does not love her. I enjoy this version just as much as the original.


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