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| Sales Rank: | 164146 (lower is better) |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
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| Director: | Bernardo Bertolucci |
| Binding: | DVD |
| ASIN: | B000284916 |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Amazon.com
Critics were decidedly mixed about this 1996 drama from Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci, and the movie enjoyed only a brief theatrical release. Now it's best known for its early appearance by Liv Tyler as a 19-year-old beauty named Lucy who summers at a villa in Tuscany with a variety of artistic types who immediately respond to her inspirational innocence. An amateur poet who has decided it's time to lose her virginity, Lucy has come to Italy after the death of her mother, who visited this artist's refuge 20 years earlier. Several young Italian men find Lucy quite heavenly (she is, after all, Liv Tyler), and she's not immune to their attentions, but she'd rather spend time with a playwright (Jeremy Irons) who is dying of AIDS and therefore has something other than sex on his mind. The movie's plot is about as substantial as Tyler's character (she's sexy, all right, but hardly an intellectual muse), but Stealing Beauty creates a serene mood that's so soothing you'll want to book a flight to Tuscany immediately, just to soak up the setting's idyllic atmosphere. If you're in the right frame of mind, this movie is like a balm for the soul, and Tyler and Bertolucci can share the credit for making this two-hour vacation so charmingly relaxing. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Makes Me Want to Move to Italy - Reviewed on 2008-12-28
This film has a relaxing quality about it that just soothes the soul. The cast is very good together as well, and the film really does have a nice ensemble quality even if Liv takes up the majority of screen time. I bought the DVD after watching on IFC, and the television version has english subtitles when Italian is being spoken. The DVD does not, as many others have mentioned. This is very annoying, because you do lose some sub-plot information by not knowing what is being said between characters speaking Italian.
I would have loved to have seen a director's cut with commentary. Anyway, regardless, this is a great film for any time you want to really escape for a couple of hours. The film is such that after you've watched it, you feel as if you've become one of the summer house guests. I think I read another review somewhere that was critical of the fact that this area of Italy is shown as being "old country" and that these areas are much more urbanized than portrayed. However, I think this is actually being addressed in the film when they show the television station/towers being built and comment on it.
All in all, I do love this film. I love watching it, I love watching certain scenes, and it's very, very relaxing!
Got virginity? - Reviewed on 2008-08-31
Stealing Beauty stars Liv Tyler, Jeremy Irons, Joseph Fiennes, Rachel Weisz, and a host of talented Italian actors. (I only mention the names preceding because those are probably the names you will recognize. Other than Tyler and Irons, most of the substantial roles seem to have been performed by Italian actors.)
At any rate, Tyler stars as Lucy Harmon, the 19-year-old, virginal daughter of a famous poet who has recently committed suicide. Lucy, upon going through her late mother's things, finds evidence that the man she thought was her father is not, indeed, her father. Her mother's notes suggest that an Italian man is Lucy's true father. Curious, Lucy goes to an art colony (of sorts) in Italy that her mother used to frequent to find out more.
There, we are introduced to a bohemian way of life and an eccentric cast of characters. Lovable Alex (Irons), a writer with a terminal illness, becomes fast friends with Lucy. As the summer progresses, Lucy discovers the identity of her father and finds her first love.
This film is beautifully shot. It takes a nostalgic, romantic view of Italy and the artist's life. The film explores the concepts of love, secrets, and youth. I enjoyed watching most of it, though there was a bit too much nudity and profanity for my taste. This is definitely an adults-only film, but there are some good performances (notably Tyler, Irons, and a solid turn by Sinead Cusack) that make the film worth watching.
(The film actually reminded me a bit of an arty version of those old "losing your virginity" movies of the 80s. It's sort-of the same concept, but treated with a loftier, more serious tone and set in a MUCH more atmospheric location.)
Dream On - Reviewed on 2008-07-27
Stealing Beauty is about Lucy Harmon (Liv Tyler), who goes to Italy to have her portrait done. Actually, a sculpture carved in wood with a chain saw. Do we ever see it? I don't think we ever do, but by then it isn't really so important. The portrait is the film, a portrait of a beautiful but awkward young woman, and the writers, artists, and Italians who come to this beautiful Italian villa for various reasons.
Lucy has other reasons for coming here besides sculpture, too. Her mother, Sara Harmon, was a poet who committed suicide. From her mothers notebooks she infers that she may have been conceived here, in an olive grove atop a hill. She wants to find out who her real father is, and the likely candidates are all here as well. Not only does she want to find out who her father is, she would also like to lose her virginity, hoping for the right person and a suitable beautiful setting.
It is a beautiful setting, but for some, like English playwright Alex (Jeremy Irons) who is aged and infirm, there is little to do but gossip. Others have affairs of their own to occupy them, but they are not immune to gossip either, and Lucy's virginity becomes a subject of intense interest.
Director Bernardo Bertolucci began as a poet, worked for Pier Paolo Pasolini as assistant director, and switched from poetry to films, but approaching film more as poetry. His best film is The Last Tango in Paris (1972), but The Last Emperor (1987) walked away with nine Academy Awards. Stealing Beauty is not up to that caliber, but it isn't as bad as you think it is going to be when you first see Liv.
She seems like a dork, and all the men seem like lecherous creeps, especially Irons. You are expecting a big train wreck, that Liv Tyler, as beautiful as she is, won't be able to act, and Bertolucci will be arrested for stealing beauty.
For instance, her poetry:
The three poems we see Lucy (Liv Tyler) compose while in Italy are:
1. I have her secret deep within for years I've had to hide I've bought the clues And now I'm hoping To bring the truth outside
2. I wait I wait so patiently I'm as quiet as a cup I hope you'll come and rattle me Quick! Come wake me up.
3. The dye is cast The dice are rolled I feel like **** you look like gold.
For someone who is supposed to be the daughter of a poet, and a character in a film by a director who began as a poet, this is not very impressive. However, Lucy just seems to express herself that way, and it comes natural to her. She doesn't expect to win the Wurlitzer prize for it, she just tears it out of the newspaper she scribbled it on and uses it for a bookmark.
Anyway, Liv Tyler ends up doing a pretty good job of acting in spite of her inexperience, dyslexia, and lack of training. Perhaps she had life experience to draw from. The daughter of Bebe Buell and Steve Tyler, she grew up thinking that Todd Rundgren was her father. Seeing that Tyler's daughter Mia could be her twin, she figured out the puzzle, and had her last name changed to Tyler by age 12.
So, while not Bertolucci's best work, Stealing Beauty is not nearly as bad as Ithought it would be. Alex ends up being not such a bad guy after all, and there are plenty of lecherous creeps, and some that are just plain lecherous, but there are also some decent male characters. Not to mention the female characters, besides Liv. Add all that to the beautiful settings, and I was able to steal a bit of beauty from this movie myself.
FILMS DIRECTED BY BERTOLUCCI
Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor : Director's Cut [Import, All-region] (Dvd) (1987)
Last Tango in Paris(1972)
FILMS AND ROLES OF JEREMY IRONS
Lolita (1997) .... Humbert Humbert
Damage (1992) .... Dr. Stephen Fleming
Kafka [Region 2] (1991) .... Kafka
Dead Ringers (1988) .... Beverly Mantle / Elliot Mantle
Swann in Love (1984) .... Charles Swann
FILMS AND ROLES OF LIV TYLER
Jersey Girl (2004) .... Maya
The Lord of the Rings - The Fellowship of the Ring (Platinum Series Special Extended Edition) (2001) .... Arwen
Armageddon (1998/I) .... Grace Stamper
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