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| Index | 176 reviews in total |
89 out of 102 people found the following review useful:
Hits all the right notes, at multiple levels., 30 June 2003
Author:
Greg Winter from Garden City, NY
This is one of those rare movies that has something for everybody and is
nearly perfect in many respects. Many of the negative comments about the
film here are one dimensional and fail to see the multiple levels on
which
the movie operates.
First, there's the political level: Colonial Africa before, during, and
after World War II populated by all of Europe (and America), and Karen
Blixen caught in the middle between Germany and England. Interestingly,
the
settlers are willing to die for their countries eventhough they have
little
idea why they are going to war, and communication between Kenya and Europe
lags by months, not weeks.
There's the sociological level: White Europeans attempting to civilize and
Westernize an essentially foreign land and people. I think the movie does
a
great job of intimating how the Kikuyus, the Somali, and Masai saw
European
settlers in their land - comical, enigmatic, and out of their element.
Instead of fading into the background, the movie would fail without the
simple wisdom of Farah who knows more than any of the white settlers in
his
land. ("This water must go to Mombasa". "God is great, Saboo").
Interestingly, Sikh Indians are brought to the English Gentlemen's club to
act as servants and when Karen dares to enter the men's only den, it's the
Sikh who is responsible for escorting her out; none of the English
"gentlemen" have the balls or nerve to do it. An interesting observation
on
the English White man's view of the world before World War
I.
Historically, the film portrays real people with some fidelity since all
of
the characters, even Farah and Kumante, were based on actual people;
Kumante
was even alive and consulted during the filming in 1982/3. The character
of
Felicity is based on Beryl Markham, a truly magnificent woman who wrote
"West with the Night" which might even portray colonial Africa better than
Isak Dineson did.
As a travel log, the movie works as well as any National Geographic since
we
see, (vicariously through Karen) as she watches a platoon of Masai
warriers
running through salt flats in full battle dress, as she learns about lions
in wild, and how a herd of Elephants looks and sounds from a biplane.
Narratively, "Out of Africa" is not just a "chic flic" as someone posted,
unless the poster thinks that all romances are essentially chic flics. I
generally can't stand romances, but this operates not just as a romance
between people (Karen and Blix, Karen and Dennis) but between people and
place. The passion they felt for each other was matched or exceeded by
their passion for Africa. When the movie was over, I too had fallen in
love
with Africa.
The movie can be watched simply for its Cinematography, editing, sound,
and
set design alone. What other movie integrates poetry by Coleridge and
Houseman, Mozart's Clarinet Concerto, and the writing of Isak Dineson so
easily that you barely notice it? Many scenes translate into still works
of
art: A bottle of wine and peaches on the hunting table, a Victrola
playing
Mozart in the African bush, a rainbow over raging falls, lions surveying
the
land from the Ngong hills.
Such a great and beautiful movie. One that I will watch over and over
again
until an opportunity to see Victoria falls comes my way.
By the way. I agree that the weakest link in the movie is Robert Redford
as
Dennis Finch Hadden since his accent is non-existent, but then again I
thought that as an American in colonial England (as Hemingway was at this
same time), it plays much better.
49 out of 66 people found the following review useful:
One of the Best Movies I have ever seen, 15 March 2000
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Author:
luccastrel from Miami, FL
OUT OF AFRICA is based on the memoirs of Danish writer Karen Blixen (pen
name, Isak Dinesen) in a coffee plantation in present day Kenya. It explains
how this brave woman overcomes the stereotype of a dainty, colonial British
lady by running the coffee farm while her husband Bror Blixen (Brandauer)
led a life of hunting and infidelities. Meryl Streep is great as Karen
Blixen. She manages to maintain the realistic Danish accent through the
whole film. Redford is great as Denys Finch-Hatton, the Etonian hunter who
keeps companion in her loneliest and hardest. But the real attraction of the
film is he outstanding photography of the African landscape together with
the sweeping John Barry soundtrack that is probably the most beautiful movie
soundtrack of the 1980s. OUT OF AFRICA will be regarded as Sydney Pollack's
asterpiece and a Classic of our times.
43 out of 58 people found the following review useful:
Beautiful, 3 January 2000
Author:
sclub28 from London, Engalnd
I had heard of this film quite alot but had never seen it. Today I did and was amazed. It is based on the life of a danish female author who moves to Africa. Meryl Streep is exellent as the lead role and keeps a believable danish accent all the way through the film. Robert Redford is also excellent as. But of course the best feature of this film is the beautiful African scnery. It captivates the viewer and I think even if the acting was poor the scenery would still make you like the film. I cannot think of any other film I have seen that has matched this one. I recommened it to anyone. This truly is a touching, marvellous film
41 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
I had a farm in Africa, 8 March 1999
Author:
James Huddleson (huddleson@worldnet.att.net)
What a memorable gem of a movie!! I thought this film deserved every one of
its seven Academy Awards it got. After viewing this film again I'm just
stupefied why didn't Meryl Streep win Best Actress in this movie. The role
of Karen Blixen was very complex and she performed it beautifully. This is
probably right up there with "Sophie's Choice" and "Kramer vs. Kramer" both
Award winning performances for her and this is right there with "Bridges of
Madison County" and "A Cry in the Dark".
Syndey Pollock hit the nail right on the head with this classic beautiful
cinematography. The acting is excellent by Streep, Redford, and Klaus Maria
Brandeur. I liked the scene when Karen (Streep) wants her servant to address her by her name and he said "You are Karen, Sabu". I also loved the owl that she had
in her room - it was a small one, but it was so cute and I loved it.
If you have a chance to rent this movie, please do - it is a classic. I love
the beginning line "I had a farm in Africa" it was so moving!!
29 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
A Dream of Africa, 18 October 2006
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Author:
raejeanowl from United States
My favorite movie of all time, hands down. I watched it for the first
time in the theatre. As it ended, the audience sat motionless and quiet
for several beats, then burst into loud applause as the ending credits
rolled. I'm not always so prophetic, but I was incredibly moved. I said
to my husband, "We've just seen the Academy Award winner." If I had no
other basis for recommendation, I would say the breathtaking
cinematography and transporting musical score would make a viewing
worthwhile (case in point: the main theme playing as Denys Finch Hatton
gives Karen Blixen her first airplane ride, and we what she sees, as
God must have seen it). But these are merely the window dressings.
There are two movie cuts floating around, which I tried to pursue
through Universal, and then Disney. Forget it. Suffice to say there is
a theatrical version and a Disney TV version, with little consequential
difference to the plot except that the latter edits out a little of
Karen's physical lovemaking with Denys and slightly expands her
intellectual relationship with Farah; which to some degree helped
buttress the development of his absolute devotion to her.
The screenplay resembles Isaak Dinesen's semi-autobiographical book
very little; even so, she did not tell the whole truth in her book.
You'll have to get over it, except that I think the character
development suffered the loss of Blixen's deep involvement with the
displaced Kikuyu tribe working her coffee plantation. Also, without an
understanding of the historical times, it would be too easy to say
simplistically that this is a woman trying to live within the terms of
a marriage of convenience and then compensating with pursuit of a
doomed passion.
What was crafted out of a mishmash of a more-or-less factual account
and director Sydney Pollack's vision is still a beautiful love and
adventure story in the midst of British colonial rule and an earlier,
more racially and sexually biased era.
Klaus Maria Brandauer as Baron Bror von Blixen (whew! - who called
Karen "Tannen," adding to my initial confusion) perfectly portrays that
fun man you like immensely but could never really trust with anything
important like your feelings. He along with several of the key male
figures and symbols in this movie will eventually bow in respect to the
"man" Karen Blixen becomes despite his often shabby treatment and other
travails, because she rises above it all and perseveres. Redford plays
mostly Redford. His Finch Hatton's sense of independence is fragile and
illusory and will ultimately cost him dearly.
There are a couple of continuity problems that bother me to this day,
including the disappearing-reappearing champagne and the continually
retracking parade marchers, but for the most part few expenses or
attentions to detail were spared, especially in the lavish costuming.
"Bare-breasted native women" will unfortunately also make their
National Geographic appearance.
Even so, Out of Africa is a treasure with a half dozen or more perfect
and unforgettable scenes; a movie as long as this review, but I hope
you'll agree, worth your patience.
32 out of 43 people found the following review useful:
Stunning, 31 August 2001
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Author:
cclif007 from Rhode Island
This film is a masterpiece in all aspects. Of course, it's not for those looking for action or a fast-paced plot -- this film allows you to meet and get to know the characters with their virtues and foibles. The cinematography is incredible and John Barry's score is matchless; one of the very few scores which would diminish a film if absent. Meryl Streep was robbed of the Oscar; her meticulous German/Danish accent was first-rate. If I had to name the weakest attribute of the film, it's the casting of Robert Redford as Denys. He did a fine job, and it was understandable that he was cast in that role, due to his bankability, but in reality, Denys was not American. Redford is a bit too all-American for this role, but it's a minor detraction. This film is my next purchase on DVD -- I've seen it dozens of times and I never tire of it.
14 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Excellently made, Streep wonderful, Redford miscast, 22 October 2006
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Author:
amhealy from Australia
Fifty years ago I was living in the Kenya highlands, only a few miles from the old Blixen farm. Not a great deal had changed since the 1920s, the period of the movie, which manages a reasonable re-creation. However, the background is unlikely to mean much to Americans, only confirming unreal stereotypes of the colonial British. Meryl Steep, as we have come to expect, is superb in the part; and in 2003 she co-narrated a wonderful documentary on the remarkable Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen), to whom in fact she bears some physical resemblance. Robert Redford is badly miscast, and why the producers didn't get one of many superb English actors for the part I can't imagine. As a love story well told in what to most people will be an exotic setting, beautifully photographed, it should be highly rated, justifying its many awards.
22 out of 37 people found the following review useful:
Africa as it was, 18 May 2003
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Author:
eumenides-1 from Portugal
Out Of Africa is a poetical rendition of an Africa that is slowly losing its
exotic appeal to the Western World.
Sydney Pollack directs this brilliant movie with skill, helped no doubt by a
well-written script. The performances are above average, although Robert
Redford might have lost his opportunity at an Oscar for refusing to play an
Englishman.
Sometimes slow, and perhaps even boring, the sets nonetheless capture the
viewer for their sheer beauty, and the score is just great to
listen.
A small classic that hasn't lost its strenght over the years, and still
entertains me after multiple viewings.
32 out of 57 people found the following review useful:
A Good Woman In Africa, 30 August 2002
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Author:
telegonus from brighton, ma
This is an overlong film derived from Isak Dinesen's memoirs of running
a coffee plantation in Kenya in the early years of the twentieth
century. The book is a different kettle of fish altogether, but I won't
go into that. Sydney Pollock does a fine job of directing here, but in
a way the movie is almost overproduced. There was, it seems, so much
time and money to play with that the film drags an awful lot. Kurt
Luedtke's script is laconic in the Hemingway manner, and very smart,
though some of the ultra-sophisticated one-liners began to irritate me
after a while. Pollock has a fine dramatic instinct and I wish that
there was more drama in this film for him to lavish his talent on. The
location shooting is superb, and the depiction of home and village life
in colonial Africa is nicely done. I find the romance between Dinesen
(called by her real name, Baroness Karen Blixen) and aviator-adventurer
Denis Finch-Hatton, less than compelling, partly because, as the
latter, Robert Redford refuses to use a British accent, which gives the
movie a Hollywood feel, not a bad thing in itself, but the film was
made in Africa, with a mostly British cast, and Meryl Streep as Blixen
uses an impeccable Danish accent, which makes Redford seem like a fish
out of water. This is bothersome because in many ways Redford is well
cast in the role, thus his American diction seems like sheer
willfulness on his part, which it probably was. Streep is fine in her
role, and is especially good in her grand dame moments, as lady of the
manor.
There are some worthwhile incidental pleasures in this film. John
Barry's fine score is perfect for the material, and really soars near
the end, appropriately I imagine since one of the two main characters
is an aviator. In supporting roles, Klaus Maria Brandauer, Michael
Kitchen, Suzanna Hamilton and Michael Gough work small wonders. The use
of Mozart, while true to life, makes this post-Amadeus film seem
already like a period piece; the period being the 1980's. Mozart was
all the rage in those days. His great music is, however, non- if not
anti-emotional, and it's odd that it was used so often in the movie.
The effect of the music is somewhat intimidating in the context of the
romance at the center of the film, as it doesn't suit at all what's
happening on screen, which can't help but make the viewer think that
perhaps he's missing something; or maybe the film is just too smart for
him. This is, again, a very eighties sort of feeling, of the sort of
one gets from watching Chariots Of Fire, or listening to the music
David Byrne and Laurie Anderson.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Deserved praise?, 22 September 2006
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Author:
gaiter88 from United Kingdom
What makes a good film? It's funny I lent my DVD of this to a mate
recently and although she didn't hate it she didn't get it either.
Which surprised me because, to me, there has never been any doubt in my
mind about the beauty and quality of this film. Anyway I was surfing
IMDb and decided to look at this page. There is (or was) a thread on
the discussion board about whether this was a good or bad film, I
clicked on it. I have never (in my modest surfing of this site) seen
such a big thread. Surely a film that evokes that much passion (the
majority of which was positive and defencive) has achieved something.
I'm not saying that Out of Africa is the best film I've ever seen (I've
yet to see that one!) but I think I can safely say that it has secured
a place for itself both in cinematic history and the future of
entertainment. You see at it heart it is a well made, timeless epic.
Yes there will always be the people who take exception to the accents,
dislike the ending or believes it drags on for too long, but that's
their lost, I can't help thinking they haven't been patient enough (and
this annoys me).
You see the thing is in many ways the endless beauty of this film lies
in its subtleties. Yes you have Meryl Streep and Redford flanked by the
scenery and music, but for me it's the things like Pollock's direction,
Michael Kitchen's performance and Karen's interaction with member's of
the tribe that make the film.
Part of me wants to tie my mate to a chair and make her sit and watch
this until she gets it. The other half is slightly relieved, because I
feel that with her rejection this film is ever so slightly more
exclusively mine, and I know that although I'm still only young I will
always have time a space for it!
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