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The Scarlet Letter

 
Movies:

The Scarlet Letter

  • Director: Roland Joffé
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Erotic Drama
  • Themes: Forbidden Love, Self-Destructive Romance, Infidelity
  • Main Cast: Demi Moore, Gary Oldman, Robert Duvall, Robert Prosky, Edward Hardwicke
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 135 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic novel of hypocrisy among America's pilgrims was brought to the screen by director Roland Joffe in this 1995 feature. Demi Moore stars as Hester Prynne, a new arrival to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1666. Prynne, who interacts freely with slaves and Quakers and wears revealing garb, is something of a free thinker and off-putting to the uptight locals. She awaits the arrival of her husband, Roger (Robert Duvall), but he is reported killed. One person who does not find Prynne unsettling is the new preacher, Arthur Dimmesdale (Gary Oldman). A torrid encounter between them produces a child, Pearl, and Hester is condemned by the colony, forced to wear a scarlet letter "A" (for "adultery"). Roger reappears; he had been living with a native tribe -- an experience that has driven him mad. He masquerades as "Roger Chillingsworth," trying to discover the identity of Pearl's father. When Hester is about to be executed, Dimmesdale confesses, but a timely Indian raid intervenes, saving him and Hester. The Scarlet Letter was widely derided by critics for sexualizing and changing Hawthorne's novel to an absurd degree. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

Joan Plowright - Harriet Hibbons; George Aguilar - Johnny Sassamon; Sarah Campbell - Prudence Stonehall; Roy Dotrice - Thomas Cheever; Dana Ivey - Meredith Stonehall; Judd Jones - Mr. Bobbin; Jodhi May - Pearl; Diane Salinger - Margaret Bellingham; Eric Schweig - Metacomet; Malcolm Storry - Major Dunsmuir; Francie Swift - Sally Short; Sheldon Peters Wolfchild - Moskeegee; Tim Woodward - Brewster Stonehall; Amy Wright - Goody Gotwick; Jim Bearden - Goodman Mortimer; Nicholas Rice - The Clerk; Lisa Jolliff-Andoh - Mituba; Len Doncheff - Trader; Marguerite McNeil - Widow Wormser

Credit

Tony Woollard - Art Director, Elisabeth Leustig - Casting, Robert F. Colesberry - Co-producer, Gabriella Pescucci - Costume Designer, Buddy Joe Hooker - First Assistant Director, Dennis Maguire - First Assistant Director, Roland Joffé - Director, Thom Noble - Editor, Dodi Fayed - Executive Producer, Tova Laiter - Executive Producer, John Barry - Composer (Music Score), Edward Collins - Camera Operator, Roy Walker - Production Designer, Alex Thomson - Cinematographer, Michael Genson - Cinematographer, Roland Joffé - Producer, Andrew G. Vajna - Producer, Rosalind Shingleton - Set Designer, Gordon White - Set Designer, Rocco Matteo - Set Designer, Richard Harrison - Set Designer, Martin Malivoire - Special Effects, Douglas Ganton - Sound/Sound Designer, John Dodds - Stunts, Fred Perron - Stunts, Alison Reid - Stunts, Paul Rutledge - Stunts, Alex Green - Stunts, Jamie Jones - Stunts, Suzy Parker - Stunts, Mike Mitchell - Stunts, Douglas Day Stewart - Screenwriter, Nathaniel Hawthorne - Book Author
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Wikipedia: The Scarlet Letter (1995 film)
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The Scarlet Letter

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Roland Joffé
Produced by Andrew G. Vajna
Written by Screenplay:
Douglas Day Stewart
Novel:
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Starring Demi Moore
Gary Oldman
Robert Duvall
Robert Prosky
Edward Hardwicke
and Joan Plowright
Music by John Barry
Cinematography Alex Thomson
Editing by Thom Noble
Distributed by Hollywood Pictures (USA)
Cinergi Pictures (foreign markets)
Release date(s) October 13, 1995
Running time 135 minutes
Language English
Budget $50,000,000

The Scarlet Letter is a 1995 film adaptation of the Nathaniel Hawthorne novel, The Scarlet Letter. It was directed by Roland Joffé and stars Demi Moore, Gary Oldman and Robert Duvall. This version was "freely adapted" from Hawthorne[1] and deviated from the original story. The film was a box-office failure and was poorly received by critics.

Contents

Plot

In the Massachusetts Bay colony in 1667, there is an uneasy truce between Puritans and Algonquian. Hester Prynne arrives overseas from England, seeking independence. She waits for her husband, befriending Quakers and setting up a home. As time passes, she falls for a young minister, who feels the same way about her. When they hear the news that her husband has most likely been killed by Native Americans ("Indians"), they engage in a relationship. When she becomes pregnant, Hester is imprisoned, where her daughter is born, and later publicly humiliated by being forced to wear a scarlet "A" for adultery. A drummer boy is ordered to follow her whenever she comes to town.

On the same day, her husband reappears with Indians, after a year's absence. Going by the name of "Dr. Chillingworth", he stirs fears of witchcraft, while seeking out Hester's lover in order to extract his revenge. As his plans are done, he attacks and scalps a man riding to town from Hester's house, disguised as Indian. Once the villagers discover this cruelty, they blame it on the Indians and bring them all to a public place to judge them. Seeing this scene, Hester's husband understands his fault and its severe results. He hangs himself in his room.

When the minister wants to talk to him, he discovers his dead body hanging from the roof of the room. He runs back to town and offers his throat instead of Hester's, admitting that he is the father of the child.

When he is about to be put to death, the Indians save him and Hester, and a battle between them and the villagers starts.

We see Hester's little daughter Pearl playing with the scarlet letter patch. After visiting Hester's husband's grave, they all leave on a horse-driven buggy. Pearl drops the scarlet "A" on the ground.

Then finally before the end credits Pearl reveals that her father dies before she becomes a teenager and that Hester never remarried. She asks God, what is a sin in his eyes.

Cast

Production

Shelburne, Nova Scotia waterfront showing grey paint finishes applied for the 1995 film.

The film was shot in British Columbia near Vancouver and in the Nova Scotia towns of Yarmouth and Shelburne in 1994. In Shelburne, the waterfront area was substantially altered to resemble a Puritan New England town in the mid 1600s. Some of the buildings on Dock Street retain the grey-tone paint finishes used for the film.

Score

Three original scores were written for this film. The first score was composed by Ennio Morricone and was quickly rejected. A second score was composed by Elmer Bernstein, but his music was set aside in lieu of the final score, composed by John Barry. Reportedly, star Demi Moore wanted a score by Barry from the start, so Morricone's and Bernsteins's music were not going to be accepted, regardless of quality.

Barry's score was released on CD by Sony Records upon the film's release in 1995. A CD of Bernstein's rejected score was released by Varese Sarabande in 2008. No recordings of Morricone's score have been released to the public.

Reception

The film was met with an overwhelmingly negative reception. It was universally panned by critics, with a 6% approval rating on popular review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.[2] It won the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Remake or Sequel and was nominated for Worst Actress (Moore), Worst Director, Worst Picture, Worst Screen Couple (Moore and either Duvall or Oldman), Worst Screenplay and Worst Supporting Actor (Duvall).[3] It was also a box office bomb, grossing only $10.3 million out of a $50 million budget.[4]

References

External links


 
 

 

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