Phim lẻ
Nội dung
Thông tin sản xuất
September 18, 2009
Ngày phát hành
$10,000,000
Ngân sách
$14,374,652
Doanh thu
Truy cập website
Website chính thức
Australia
Region (AU)
United Kingdom
Region (GB)

Pathe
GB

Screen Australia
AU

UK Film Council
GB

Hopscotch Productions
AU
Bright Star Films
GB
Jan Chapman Productions
AU
New South Wales Film & Television Office
AU
Đạo diễn
Jane Campion
Male
Diễn viên
Abbie Cornish
Fanny Brawne
Ben Whishaw
John Keats
Paul Schneider
Mr. Brown
Kerry Fox
Mrs. Brawne
Thomas Brodie-Sangster
Samuel
Claudie Blakley
Maria Dilke
Gerard Monaco
Charles Dilke
Antonia Campbell-Hughes
Abigail
Samuel Roukin
Reynolds
Amanda Hale
Reynolds sister
Lucinda Raikes
Reynolds sister
Samuel Barnett
Mr. Severn
Jonathan Aris
Mr. Hunt
Olly Alexander
Tom Keats
Roger Ashton-Griffiths
shopkeeper
Eileen Davies
Mrs. Bentley
Sebastian Armesto
Mr. Haslam
Adrian Schiller
Mr. Taylor
Vincent Franklin
Dr. Bree
Trailer
Mùa
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Những Người Khốn Khổ 2012
Les Misérables 2012
7.5 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Becoming Jane
Becoming Jane
7.0 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

An American Werewolf in London
An American Werewolf in London
7.5 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

The Lover
The Lover
6.8 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

The Personal History of David Copperfield
The Personal History of David Copperfield
6.4 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Jungleland
Jungleland
6.2 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Girl with a Pearl Earring
Girl with a Pearl Earring
6.9 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

The Miseducation of Cameron Post
The Miseducation of Cameron Post
6.6 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Bright Star
Bright Star
6.9 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Jackie: De Nhat Phu Nhan
Jackie
6.6 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Nymphomaniac: Vol. II
Nymphomaniac: Vol. II
6.6 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

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Maurice
7.6 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Người Đàn Bà Cuồng Dâm: Phần 1
Nymphomaniac: Volume I
6.9 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Trong Từng Nhịp Thở
Breathe
7.2 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

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The Danish Girl
7.1 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

The Kindness of Strangers
The Kindness of Strangers
6.5 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Ophelia
Ophelia
6.0 | Tình Cảm • Tâm Lý

Vẻ Đẹp Bị Đánh Cắp
Stealing Beauty
6.5 | Tình Cảm

Cẩm Tú Tiền Trình
Long And Winding Road
6.2 | Tình Cảm

Hachi: A Dog's Tale
Hachi: A Dog's Tale
8.1 | Tình Cảm • Gia Đình

Khát Vọng Tình Yêu
Revolutionary Road
7.3 | Tình Cảm

Trước Ngày Em Đến
Me Before You
7.4 | Tình Cảm
Screens & Gallery















International Critic Reviews
Good performances from Cornish, Whishaw and Schneider for a folks and costums movie. You will enjoy it if you like the genre. If not ... well, probably it would be a slow and dull romantic drama for you.
Bright Star is the rare biopic of an artist that actually provides some insight into its subject’s craft. Usually, a film about a writer, including such recent examples as To Olivia (Roald Dahl) and The Laureate (Robert Graves), will approach the creative process as 99-percent inspiration and 1-percent actual work – and sometimes not even that. Writing is taken as matter of course; poems come out straight out of the author’s mouth, fully formed like Athena emerging from Zeus’s forehead. Bright Star doesn’t dismiss the notion of divine inspiration, but it does not tacitly take it for granted either; on the contrary, it acknowledges and articulates it (“If poetry does not come as naturally as leaves to a tree, then it had better not come at all”). Moreover, even though it declares “Poetic craft is a carcass, a sham,” it does so perhaps out of modesty (after all, “A poet is not at all poetical. He is the most un-poetical thing in existence. He has no identity”), before diving right into the crux of the craft itself (“A poem needs understanding through the senses. The point of diving in a lake is not immediately to swim to the shore but to be in the lake, to luxuriate in the sensation of water. You do not work the lake out. It is an experience beyond thought. Poetry soothes and emboldens the soul to accept mystery”). This is all great stuff, and writer/director Jane Campion displays a sincere love for poetry with which she infuses her characters (who not only commit their favorite poems to memory, but can even recite verbatim from literary reviews). The problem is that her cast themselves are un-poetical and have no identity, and while this might serve them well in their poetic endeavors, as characters it renders them dull and unappealing; Ben Wishaw is wishy-washy as John Keats, and although credit is due Campion for not depicting him as a proto-rockstar (unlike, for instance, Leo DiCaprio’s Rimbaud in Total Eclipse), she loses many points for portraying Keats’s romantic interest Fanny Brawne (Abbie Cornish) as a proto-groupie (early on, in order to impress him, she quotes some of Keats’s verses back to him, as if he weren’t familiar enough with his own work). I’m aware that an artist’s love life, or lack thereof, tends to inform his creative output, but the romance between Wishaw and Cornish is so corny and mushy that we can’t believe such saccharine sentiment could ever translate into Keats’s sublime lyricism. Only Paul Schneider as the sardonic Charles Armitage Brown, Keats’s fellow poet, comes across as a sensible person who can tell the difference between poetry and real life; he starts out as boorish for the sake of boorishness, but he grows on us the more we realize that his contempt for the shallow Fanny is well-deserved (I especially enjoyed when he tricks her with a question about Paradise Lost’s non-existent rhymes).