Feast of July
Cast :Embeth Davidtz, Tom Bell
Director :Christopher Menaul
Studio :Buena Vista Home Vid
Format :Color, Closed-captioned
Released Date :October 13, 1995
DVD Released Date :April 06, 2004
Language :English (Dubbed)
Audience Rating :R (Restricted)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateJune 26, 2005
SummaryOverlooked Merchant/Ivory
Content
This is the hidden gem you are looking for. It spent about a week in the theaters and few have heard of it, but it is as good as Room with a View or Howard's End. Darker but deeper than both. Not as popular perhaps because the ending is tragic, but the story and acting are top-notch. Embeth Davitz is fabulous (and fabulous to look at). I will never understand why these wonderful period actresses come and go with barely a whisper, while sub-mediocre actresses like Nicole Kidman and Julia Roberts prosper. Titanic makes a billion and this movie makes almost nothing. Flee the topsy-turvy world and buy this movie. It is a great escape to quality and feeling.

Rating
DateMarch 01, 2003
Summaryfeast of july --- my favorite movie that nobody knows
Content
This is an amazing film --- exquisitely executed, shot and acted with a simple story and gorgeous period detail --- both Embeth Davidz & Ben Chaplin are brilliant.
I saw this movie twice in the theatres because it was such a "gem" and then nobody was interested --probably because there were no stars in it --- but see it,,,,it's a tragic and beautiful love story. Pay special attention to the cinematography which is extraordinary.
steven

Rating
DateNovember 18, 2002
Summaryfeast for the heart
Content
This movie is one of the few that made me cry! I was pleasantly surprised to see Davidtz in a more compassionate and warm character than the one we remember as 'Natasha' from 'Bridget Jones's Diary'....the costumes were lovely in this film, and although the character goes through so much burden, she comes out on top with strength and understanding. A touching film that moves the heart.

Rating
DateJune 05, 2001
SummaryPurefoy a Delight in Feast
Content
I mainly bought this film to see James Purefoy. Purefoy did a masterful job as the charming yet bossy older brother in his small role. This film was vintage Merchant Ivory in terms of the lovely scenery and great costuming. The film also had a tragic story in rural England Thomas Hardy type quality reminiscent of Tess of the D'Urbervilles and The Woodlanders, eventhough this is not a Hardy story. I'm glad I got the film, but be prepared for an unhappy ending.

Rating
DateDecember 10, 2000
Summarybittersweet feast
Content
A credible step back in time, this beautifully filmed period piece set in 19th century England follows the fortunes of a troubled young woman taken in by a family with three unmarried sons. Hospitality is sincere but conflicts of affections naturally develop. The mother in the household, severe and stoic in her aspect, slowly warms to the earnest and unassuming nature of their guest and a tenuous bond forms until conflicts emerge.

The film portrays a variety of male characters with their array of emotions and situational ego struggles in an historic setting that draws you into the period as well as the story's building drama. Even the young woman's villianous past lover receives comprehensive treatment of the qualities of his character.

The high-strung son's unbridled passion and the young woman's responding compassion that suddenly envelops these two uniquely tender and intense hearts is compelling and lifts the story above cliche. A fateful dilemma, born of sudden violence, confronts and pursues the young lovers and makes for a desperate moral/psychological impass, the conclusions of which are hauntingly profound.

Casting of this film is flawless. Davidtz is just the sort of woman to stir any man's heart and her performance is utterly magnetic. As the center of a gripping and soulful story that stretches the heart to maximum understanding and acceptance, her poignant final scene is one that lingers in its hopeful promise.

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