| Page 1 of 2: | [1] [2] |
| Index | 16 reviews in total |
21 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
rare gem overlooked as much as statue, 18 December 2004
![]()
Author:
mark worrell (nuntukamen@hotmail.com) from naples, florida
It is difficult for me to comprehend why there is only one viewer comment for this film, or why it is rated under a six. If an excellent film is about entertainment, intelligence, great acting and a terrific story with a treasury of clever humor that expounds the deeper meaning of a good relationship between a man and a woman over wealth and selfishly egotistical success, then this is a standout film that achieves a richness of artistic accomplishment that very few films do. No one truly sees the beauty of the bronze statue except the lowly and weathered housekeeper, a financially struggling mute, unable to express the profound feelings that are moving within her in words, but Rudi Davies sure gets it across with her expression and eyes. I had to drive 30 miles to the Cedar Lee Theater, Cleveland's only real art house, during it's original release, but after the film was over I realized it would have been worthwhile if I would have had to walk...some films are just that special
14 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
An Excellent Film, Not Given Enough Credit, 27 June 2006
![]()
Author:
Bacardi1 from United States
This is by far one of my favorite little films, & just yesterday I
bought it on DVD for a mere pittance ($6 & change)& settled in happily
to enjoy it again. Only once in a blue moon does it turn up on
artsy/independent film-type channels, so don't hold your breath looking
for it on TV.
Everyone in this film is perfectly cast, & what makes it come together
so beautifully is that each character in this piece exhibits faults &
foibles, as we all do. It's so refreshing to watch something
entertaining where the characters are portrayed as "real" - albeit
flawed - people. In addition, the jazz musical score throughout the
film fits the mood like a glove.
My favorite not-to-be-missed extremely funny scene? John Malkovich's
"Jake", in a moment of depressed exasperation, talking aloud to himself
composing his own obituary. I laugh every time I hear it - his delivery
is perfect. Another favorite scene, very poignant, is when Mr.
Malkovich's "Jake" phones his parents, after an apparently long
absence, with the apparent intention of requesting monetary assistance.
From the one-sided conversation you hear, you get an automatic insight
into "Jake"'s upbringing, & perhaps why he's taken the path he has.
Even though short, it's an extremely moving & insightful scene.
This movie is definitely worth renting if you can find it - but for the
money, it's also worth adding to one's permanent DVD collection.
13 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Highly underrated movie; filled with irony., 7 December 2005
![]()
Author:
StephenTaylor from Canada
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
One of the most underrated movies of all time. I am amazed at how many people can watch this film and not get the point. The Object of Beauty is an intelligent conversation about rich and poor, selfishness and giving, and basically how to be! How to behave as a human being. The language of the film is irony, specifically situational irony. It is ironic that Malkovic's character refers to himself as a pig being placed in a very sweaty position. Pig's don't sweat! It is ironic that the female deaf character claims that the inanimate sculpture spoke to her. It is ironic that while John's character is reporting the theft of the statue we learn that he has stolen an object of beauty from another man; MacDowell's character. Ironic even more that the insurance investigator is used to bring this info forward. You will enjoy this film much more if you pay attention to the irony of the value placed by different characters upon this Henry Moore sculpture. It is worth nothing to some, only money to others, an emotional commitment to another, and an object of aspiration to one other. All of these perspectives speak to each other, and it is a very interesting conversation.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
How did I miss this first time around, 30 January 2010
![]()
Author:
Gluepack from Bulgaria
Not the usual fare for PPV on Bulsatcom in Bulgaria and, with Malkovich
currently appearing every few seconds on CNN, in ads for one of their
items about him (I've seen the item and he is sickeningly pretentious),
I was in two minds whether or not to use my last (free) token to watch
it.
My God! I am glad I did. Malkovich and MacDowell gave superlative
performances in a beautifully written, directed and acted piece where
even the minor roles combined to make this a masterpiece of story and
film. Not just "even" the minor roles, as these were excellent
performances by Joss Ackland, Ricci Harnett, Bill Paterson, Roger
Lloyd-Pack, etc., etc., yes even the few lines from Pip Torrens as the
art evaluator. Rudi Davies was excellent (not sure why we haven't seen
anything from her in the last fifteen years).
Well, my free token ran out three minutes before the end. Pity!
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
many have missed the point-Possible spoilers, 6 August 2002
Author:
cocreate
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I particularly have to disagree with a couple of reviews which see the
deaf
mute maid as unsympathetic, selfish and idiotic. She is the movie's
emotional core, and the only character who has a true arc. Yes, she
commits
a selfish act, but she returns the statue when she realizes it was as
wrong
for her to take the statue from its owners as it was for her brother to
take
it from her. That is development of a kind the other characters don't
have,
and admittedly such a lack is a problem with this movie. Before one tosses
aside her return of the statue as merely ethical on a childish level,
consider what prompted her to take the statue in the first place: her
first
caress of the earless statue reveals a profound identification with it. In
a
world severely limited both by physical challenges and her economic
situation, her opportunities to see herself as having any sort of beauty
have obviously been rare to non-existent. Be certain that this statue is a
full-strength totem object for her, rendered with the sensitivity of a
master artist's hand. Out of a life so empty, the statue's return
represents
a genuine sacrifice of self. Then perhaps the "why anyone in this movie
does
what they do" problem becomes less vexing, at least with regard to
one.
The movie's major mistake is ending with Jake and Tina, whom one suspects
will never really change their habits or lifestyle even if they are
talking
about it, instead of giving us any idea what's to become of the maid, even
(or perhaps especially) on an internal level.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
living well is the best revenge, 21 December 2010
![]()
Author:
Michael Neumann from United States
The object in question is a pint-sized Henry Moore statuette, owned by shallow sophisticate Andie McDowell and appraised at $35,000, an amount in many ways even more beautiful to its owner than the item itself. Especially when McDowell and her 'husband' (played to haughty perfection by John Malkovich) find themselves at a fiscal disadvantage while living beyond their means in a posh London hotel. In the vernacular of the upwardly mobile, they aren't 'fluid', and when the statuette disappears they immediately accuse each other of plotting to collect the insurance value. The film is an underhanded, cynical, satirical poke at American materialism, pointless in the end because nothing is resolved. But the plot itself is secondary to the characters (ugly though they are), and rarely have two actors been better suited to their roles: McDowell's poor little rich girl routine is by now second nature, and Malkovich captures all the self-absorbed boredom of the ersatz upper class with his languid voice and steady reptilian gaze.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
I love this movie, 15 April 2007
![]()
Author:
gabivali22 from Romania
The Object of Beauty (1991) it has all that is needed for a movie to
keep you interested I love it. Its funny, interesting and romantic kind
of...and let's not forget who is playing : John Malkovich & Andie
MacDowell I recommend it. Enjoy
synopsis:
American couple Jake and Tina are living in an expensive London hotel
way beyond what they can afford. When they were asked to pay the bill,
Jake wants to sell Tina's 20.000 pound Henry Moore sculpture, but she
is not happy about that. The deaf-mute hotel maid admires the sculpture
for its beauty rather than its value. When the sculpture goes missing,
the couple start fighting over it... Written by Sami Al-Taher
{staher2000@yahoo.com}
Charming comedy about how a couple's relationship waivers in tandem
with the disposition of their statuette. With no fixed abode, Jake and
Tina live in hotels across the world. With a large bill due, and money
in short supply, their plan to "steal" their Henry Moore statue and
claim against it is thwarted when someone else steals it first! They
soon start distrusting each other's motives as they search for the
statue, and keep trying to get its valuation boosted while avoiding the
bill. With no sign of it, they start to drift apart, despite being in
love, and don't reconcile until it reappears one day - having been
stolen by a deaf-mute maid, who feels the statue "spoke" to her.
Written by Cynan Rees {cynanrees@hotmail.com}
4 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
A Comedy with Style *Possible Spoilers, 10 June 2001
![]()
Author:
Todd Honig from Hollywood, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
John Malkovich and Andie McDowell play a couple of jet-setters who hatch a
plot to steal their own statue so they can collect the insurance and pay off
their ever-rising hotel and credit card bills.The chemistry between the two
of them reminds one of William Powell and Myrna Loy.If they had picked up
the pace a bit,they would have had a real classic comedy here.This film is
highly watchable,though.The score by Tom Bahler fits the film like a
glove.Lolita Davidovich's (as a girlfriend of McDowell's)performance is a
bit too low key,but it doesn't really hurt the film that much.All in all,a
pleasant way to kill a couple hours.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Object of Beauty a Must See for your own sense of Morality, 18 November 2006
![]()
Author:
devo99 from Canada
I watched this for the first time on DVD last night and early this morning. I totally fell in love with Jenny and wanted to take her into my world and live happily ever after. I am sorry that more wasn't concluded with her at the end. Jake and Tina other wise should have been swept out to sea by a tsunami at the end. Jenny portrayed the commonalty & frailty of most of humanity(her brother being the subversive side of the rest of the commoners). Jake of course was the corporation and greed aspect of humanity with Tina being the human lemmings that follow the Jake side of life. I am sure though that if Tina had realized the true reason why Jenny took the statue she would have probably given it to her.(NOT!!) Tina's self-obsession during the encounter with Jenny just shows how shallow she really is. Glad I watched this movie and goes again to prove that the the Yanks still don't know how to make a good movie. Well not since D.W. Griffith that is. DEVO the guy who will never see ET.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Wonderful concept - inadequate execution, 14 August 1999
Author:
cleo-24 from USA
This movie disappointed me. It's billed as a 'low key comedy', but ends up
being so low key, you wonder (with the exception of a couple of scenes)
where the comedy is. Most of my disappointment, however, stems from the
script - aside from the chambermaid and her brother, I simply did not care
what happened to the characters. The juxtaposition of the two ways of life
was excellent - but it's too obvious where the scriptwriter's sympathies
lie.
| Page 1 of 2: | [1] [2] |
| Plot summary | Amazon.com summary | Ratings |
| Newsgroup reviews | External reviews | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |