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Sense and Sensibility |
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When rich Mr. Dashwood dies his second wife and their three daughters are left penniless while his son John inherits all the riches, including the estate the family used to life in. With a greedy and selfish wife by his side, John ushers the rest of the family out of the house to make sure he does not have to support or justify his poor relatives’ presence to his elitist friends and in-laws. |
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without further explanation. The two sisters are heartbroken. Elinor had not heard from Edward in a long time and now Marianne had been left without explanation. |
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Then, as the story progresses, we are taken closer to the two main characters, Elinor and Marianne, and many of the previous characters are carefully removed from the picture one by one to make sure the viewer’s attention is centered more and more on only these two personalities. After the story has found its resolution at the end of the third act, these characters are then slowly brought back into the picture one by one, just as they had been blended out. It is an incredible device that gradually builds the intensity of the inner character development of the story’s heroines, culminating in a powerful finale. |
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had a hand for that, be it through her involvement in films like “Howard’s End” or this one. She has the ability to add a class and noblesse to her parts that makes every one of her performances intellectual, yet entertaining. In “Sense And Sensibility” she shows us the strongest of all sisters that is torn apart in her heart. While everyone around her is completely self-centered and self-complacent, she is the link that holds everything together while also dealing with her own pain. No one pays much attention to what she is going through, what ordeal she endures while putting on a happy face and taking care of everyone else’s problems, and her liberating finale is one of the greatest and most emotional moments of the film. |
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Columbia Tristar Home Video has prepared “Sense and Sensibility” as a Special Edition on this DVD and included a few additional features. The image quality of the anamorphic transfer is breathtakingly sharp and colorful. Highly detailed and with rich hues this transfer brings out the best of the film’s stylish photography. No distracting artifacts are visible and the picture has a very warm and balanced feel throughout. The film is presented in is original theatrical 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio. |
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Shamus. While the first commentary track mostly discusses story-related issues regarding Austen’s work and the film’s characters, the second one is a little more technical in approach and covers many of the filmmaking aspects of “Sense and Sensibility”. A number of deleted scenes from the film, Emma Thompson’s entertaining Golden Globe acceptance speech, |
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August, 1999 |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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