Не могу сказать ничего про этот фильм, кроме того что безмерно люблю его.
Вот если кто-то другой скажет что-нибудь я могу с ним согласиться или возразить ему.
А так мне кажется, что я понимаю его всей душой.
Смотрю его только в таком непонятном состоянии , в котором нахожусь сейчас.
Последний раз смотрела его в июле 2011 года, хм.
Всё хочу прочитать книгу, по которой снят фильм, ну и романы Вирджинии Вульф разумеется. Есть время ...
"The Hours" was the original working title of Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway".
In the beginning of the movie, every house is seen to be having flowers.
Every house has a different color of flowers: red, yellow and blue - Virginia Woolf's trademark.
Nicole Kidman read all of Virginia Woolf's personal letters, and found that they gave her greater access to her character than her novels.
Julianne Moore's segment was filmed first, then Meryl Streep's, and finally Nicole Kidman's.
Meryl Streep is actually mentioned in the original novel on which the film is based.
Julianne Moore's time line was bumped up from the novel's austere 1949 setting to the more optimistic and affluent 1951, as that better served to show Laura's powerless feeling of alienation.
Much concern surrounded the portrayal of Laura Brown in the 2001 segment.
Fearing that suitable makeup couldn't make Julianne Moore look elderly, and due to scheduling conflicts, Betsy Blair was cast to play the role of Old Laura.
Scenes were filmed with Meryl Streep. However, director Stephen Daldry was so dissatisfied with the outcome that Moore was brought in much later
in "old" make-up, to re-shoot scenes with Streep. It took 6 hours to apply Moore's make-up for the scene.
Meryl Streep likes to prepare for her characters by selecting a piece of music that she listens to constantly.
Director Stephen Daldry liked her selection so much (Jessye Norman singing "Four Last Songs" by Richard Strauss) that he included it in the scene where Jeff Daniels's character visits Clarissa's apartment.
Meryl Streep decided not to re-read "Mrs. Dalloway" in preparation for the film, as she felt that her character Clarissa would have read it in college and not particularly have understood it then, much as Streep herself had done when she was at college.
Nicole Kidman loved wearing the prosthetic nose and wore it in private too, mainly as she was undergoing a divorce from Tom Cruise at the time
and was attracting a lot of paparazzi interest. Much to her delight, by wearing her fake nose out and about, she found she could easily evade the paparazzi as they didn't recognize her.
Вот если кто-то другой скажет что-нибудь я могу с ним согласиться или возразить ему.
А так мне кажется, что я понимаю его всей душой.
Смотрю его только в таком непонятном состоянии , в котором нахожусь сейчас.
Последний раз смотрела его в июле 2011 года, хм.
Всё хочу прочитать книгу, по которой снят фильм, ну и романы Вирджинии Вульф разумеется. Есть время ...
"The Hours" was the original working title of Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway".
In the beginning of the movie, every house is seen to be having flowers.
Every house has a different color of flowers: red, yellow and blue - Virginia Woolf's trademark.
Nicole Kidman read all of Virginia Woolf's personal letters, and found that they gave her greater access to her character than her novels.
Julianne Moore's segment was filmed first, then Meryl Streep's, and finally Nicole Kidman's.
Meryl Streep is actually mentioned in the original novel on which the film is based.
Julianne Moore's time line was bumped up from the novel's austere 1949 setting to the more optimistic and affluent 1951, as that better served to show Laura's powerless feeling of alienation.
Much concern surrounded the portrayal of Laura Brown in the 2001 segment.
Fearing that suitable makeup couldn't make Julianne Moore look elderly, and due to scheduling conflicts, Betsy Blair was cast to play the role of Old Laura.
Scenes were filmed with Meryl Streep. However, director Stephen Daldry was so dissatisfied with the outcome that Moore was brought in much later
in "old" make-up, to re-shoot scenes with Streep. It took 6 hours to apply Moore's make-up for the scene.
Meryl Streep likes to prepare for her characters by selecting a piece of music that she listens to constantly.
Director Stephen Daldry liked her selection so much (Jessye Norman singing "Four Last Songs" by Richard Strauss) that he included it in the scene where Jeff Daniels's character visits Clarissa's apartment.
Meryl Streep decided not to re-read "Mrs. Dalloway" in preparation for the film, as she felt that her character Clarissa would have read it in college and not particularly have understood it then, much as Streep herself had done when she was at college.
Nicole Kidman loved wearing the prosthetic nose and wore it in private too, mainly as she was undergoing a divorce from Tom Cruise at the time
and was attracting a lot of paparazzi interest. Much to her delight, by wearing her fake nose out and about, she found she could easily evade the paparazzi as they didn't recognize her.