The Age of Innocence with Daniel Day-Lewis: DVD Cover
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The Age of Innocence Director: Martin Scorsese Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Michelle Pfeiffer, Winona Ryder, Miriam Margolyes

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  • DVD Release Date: 11/06/2001
  • Original Release: 1993
  • Rating: Rated PG
  • Sales Rank: 7,161

Viewer Rating: (5 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Dolby Digital Surround; Filmographies; Production Notes; Scene Selections; Theatrical Trailers; English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Thai subtitles

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 --
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [5:09]
2. The Welland Box [4:45]
3. The Annual Opera Ball [5:12]
4. Mrs. Mingott [9:40]
5. The Van Der Luydens [1:05]
6. Duke of St. Austrey Dinner [5:05]
7. Asking for His Help [4:50]
8. The Flower Shop [1:04]
9. The Aviary [2:37]
10. Talking Business [2:29]
11. The Shaughraun [3:47]
12. What She's Running From [5:29]
13. "Is There Someone Else?" [2:48]
14. "There's Another Woman" [6:20]
15. European Honeymoon [9:36]
16. Newport Archery Club [3:08]
17. The Blenker House [5:38]
18. Boston Common [2:07]
19. Why the Countess Stays [:07]
20. The Beaufort Finances [3:56]
21. In the Carriage [5:11]
22. The Art Museum [1:13]
23. Key to His Release [6:02]
24. Something Important to Say [5:28]
25. Farewell Dinner [1:22]
26. May's News [2:23]
27. In Paris [4:34]
28. Outside the Apartment [6:04]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

In Martin Scorsese's adaptation of Edith Wharton's 1920 novel, romance between an upper-class gentleman and an ostracized lady is doomed by 19th century New York society. Shortly after his engagement to blandly genteel May Welland (Winona Ryder), Newland Archer (Daniel Day-Lewis) is reacquainted with May's scandalous cousin Ellen Olenska (Michelle Pfeiffer). As the head of an esteemed family, Archer initially uses his standing to try to rehabilitate Ellen's reputation, but he finds himself increasingly drawn to her disregard for the codes of New York manners. Bound by ingrained society mores and his peers' insinuations, Newland tries to dodge his growing passion by rushing his marriage to May, but he cannot keep himself from confessing his love to Ellen. Recognizing that Newland could never abandon his sense of honor and be happy, Ellen pushes Newland to May and leaves town. The marriage proceeds as dictated, but when Newland unexpectedly sees Ellen again, he yearns for the affair to come to fruition. However, he underestimates not only what May knows but also her ability to uphold the rules of propriety. Sumptuously shot by Michael Ballhaus, the film offers meticulously designed costumes and settings that evoke a culture as seductively beautiful in its surfaces as it is stifling in its rituals. Unspoken emotions are expressed through such details as yellow roses or a clipped cigar, a fade to red or a single camera move. Using Wharton's original prose to comment on the setting's hypocrisies, Joanne Woodward's voiceover narration suggests how much decisive power is buried beneath dainty femininity. The Age of Innocence received five Oscar nominations, including Best Supporting Actress for Ryder and Best Screenplay for Scorsese and Jay Cocks, and a win for Best Costumes. Although The Age of Innocence seemed like a departure from Scorsese's prior work, Newland is as much at the mercy of his circle's Byzantine structure (and his own conscience) as are Scorsese's more familiar mobsters; Newland's persecutors just wear white tie and tails. Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

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Customer Reviews

A genius brings Edith Wharton to the screenby Daun

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July 29, 2009: Martin Scorsese, whose brilliant and gritty crime dramas have made him a legend in film-making, has demonstrated far more than versatility in his translation of Edith Wharton's great novel of 1870s New York society. His skills as a film-maker are on display here as nowhere else, and they are magnificent. He is one of Hollywood's great story-tellers. (One wonders, as a result of viewing _Age of Innocence_, if Merchant-Ivory should have been compelled to make an action-adventure movie, or if Michael Mann should have been forced to film a romantic comedy.)

The cinematography is magnificent, showing the muted colors of a bygone, genteel age. The acting is superb: Daniel Day-Lewis and Michelle Pfeiffer have never done better. Winona Ryder, considered by many to be a lightweight, proves her critics wrong with a portrayal of a complicated yet essentially simple character who stuns both the audience and her fellow characters with her intelligently desperate manipulation and concealed will. The supporting cast (including Richard E. Grant, Geraldine Chaplin, and Jonathan Pryce) is strong and yet unobtrusive, as it should be for what is essentially a three-person story.

The only drawback is the heavy-handed score. I probably shouldn't complain when a film-maker goes to the trouble to create an original score in an age of pop-song excesses, but the fact is that I noticed the soundtrack when I should have been lost in this absorbing tale. Soundtracks should be like baseball umpires: if you notice them during a game, something is wrong.

Absolute masterpiece !!by Anonymous

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September 12, 2005: Don't miss this movie. I just read the novel by Edith Wharton and then I rented the movie. It is completely faithful to the book. Daniel Day-Lewis is pure animal magnetism ! He will evoke sympathy in even the most hardened movie watcher. This is way more than just a "romance" it is brilliant movie-making.


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