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Les Miserables
Liam Neeson, Geoffrey Rush

Sony Pictures, 1998

average customer review:based on 225 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended




Les Miserable - The Protagonist

It was a rare saturday (last night) when I got to stay at home just to watch HBO and as luck would have it, at 4 in the morning this movie, which seems to be set in the old times somewhere in Europe, starts and catches my attention. I had not heard of 'Les Miserables' ever, but now after seeing what I saw I can't wait to get my hands on the book and also experience the musical.
I found the movie a beautiful peice of art. Set in the old times in France, the movie tries to show the hardships faced by this man, once a convict followed by being a generous mayor then a caring lover of a woman, who spits on his face (I got to say Uma Thuran looks absolutely fabulous in the movie), a caring father-like, and then the saviour of an infamy (among the cops) revolutionary for his daughter.

There were two parts in the movie which which particularly left an impression & which I shall never forget:
1) when he lifts Uma in his arms and brings her to the table for having a meal with her;
2) after the inspector tells him, he's free and kills himself, you could see the expression on his face that for the first time in his life he feels free and doesn't having anything to fear...

I wish I could read the book forst, so i could judge the adaptation more critically.. but currently, i am high on the performances and the imagerry.

Real Nice!!!


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An enjoyable classic!

I can't judge this movie fairly. I have read the book and watched the musical, both live and on DVD. So, naturally, I will be making subconscious comparisons, even though we all know that movies generally undertake their own artistic direction.

For one, although some people have claimed the storyline to be jumpy, I thought it was rather smooth-flowing, possibly because I already know the story beforehand. Although changes were made to the original story, for example, Valjean admitting to Cosette that he is a convict when he only did so before he died in the end, and Cosette remembering that Valjean is not her father when it was originally intended for her to believe that he was her real father, these changes were probably made to accommodate the short play time (2 hours is barely enough to fit in a 1484-pages story).

Liam Neeson portrayed Valjean to be exactly the way Hugo would have intended Valjean to be. In the beginning, he was a hard, animalistic beast of a man. But Neeson is able to morph into the gentle Mayor with ease, and that highlights Valjean's transformation. Geoffrey Rush is brilliant as Javert. Never was there anyone more suited to play the cold, sadistic inspector. Uma Thurman is surprisingly convincing as Fantine. I had begun to stereotype her as the sort of action-thriller-sci-fi flick girl but this proved me wrong. Watch this movie for these three actors alone, for they bring class to your living room.

What I didn't like about the movie was the lack of development on the revolution. Hugo was a revolutionary. He wanted Les Mis to ignite the people's spirits. The revolution was a crucial scene, and the death of the revolutionaries a touching one. Through this movie, I can barely recognize which ones are Enjolras, Courfeyrac, Feuilly etc and yet the character names appear on the credit roll in the end.

The change of the ending (with Valjean walking free) did not leave much of an impact on me compared with the original ending. I loved the last page of Hugo's novel, where Cosette read Valjean's letter. Valjean had a tragic life. He was one of the Les Miserables, the underdogs, the wretched. For me, they had distorted the true message of Les Mis by changing the ending of the wonderful classic.


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Great movie, but.....

Great movie, but the book was better...The movie is about the ex-convict, Jean Valjean, trying to help Fantine, a poor woman trying to make enough money to pay the Thenardiers to take care of her child Cosette, and later raising Cosette as his own, while also being persued by the persistant Inspector Javert.

What happens in the movie basically happens in the book as well, but the book also has much more going on. The book has an intricate connection between many of the characters that the movie doesn't have, and also focuses on much more than Jean Valjean, whom the movie mostly focuses on.

I would suggest reading the book first, and then watching the movie.


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reviews: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, page 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20



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