Three different women, trying to hide their pain with lies.
Three different stories, ending in one.
The first story is Virginia Woolf''s. We follow her while she's writing Mrs. Dalloway until her unexpected suicide in 1941. She seemed so happy...
Nicole Kidman as Virginia Woolf
The second woman is the housewife Laura Brown, living in California, in the fifties. She's got the perfect life: a loving husband, beautiful child and pregnant with a second. But she's stuck in a stifling marriage. She led the life of a stranger and the only moment she could truly be herself was while reading Mrs. Dalloway. And what if she'd make an end to all of it, just like Virginia did? The only thing she had to do was take a few
pills...
Julianne Moore as Laura Brown
The third woman is Clarissa Vaughan, she lives in contemporary New York with her girlfriend Sally, but somehow she seems a re-incarnation of Mrs. Dalloway. She is confident, strong, has lots of friends, gives parties. But what nobody knows, except her old lover Richard, is that the parties she gives are meant to cover the silence...
Meryl Streep as Clarissa Vaughan
Besides the incredible story, the best thing in this movie are the performances of the actors. Evey single actor has created such strong emotions making you stop breathing for a while. You forget absolutely everything. There is no Julianne Moore, no Nicole Kidman, no Ed Harris, no Meryl Streep. There you have, the characters, the people, you have Virginia, Laura, Richard and Clarissa, there's the story. And after the movie, the thinking starts. You start thinking about how they feel, about how you feel, about the extreme emotions laid bare on the water surface. Emotions most movies don't show. The truth without lies.
As you'd expect: I read the book by Michael Cunningham. It didn't disappoint me a bit! This man has such a gift! Every page makes you shiver. Every letter, every word transports you to this imaginary world of his characters, but it seems so real. As if you had seen Clarissa in the street, this morning. You'd said hello, she smiled while carrying the roses. She did, you remeber it very well! Or maybe she didn't...
What makes it so special is the feelings the women are dealing with: the emptiness. They feel like they aren't being themselves. There's something wrong, they feel like living a lie. But nobody wonders if they are okay, people assume they are because they are strong women.
The soundtrack by Philip Glass is a masterpiece, as you all know soundtracks are one of my obsessions.
"Always the years...
Always the love...
... Always THE HOURS."
"Mrs. Dalloway, always giving parties....
.... to cover the silence....."
"Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself."
"Sally, I think I'm going to buy the flowers myself!"
(thanks to the person who made this beautiful gif.
Found it on Tumblr.)
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