Where Angels Fear to Tread

Where Angels Fear to Tread

1991 "Only one thing could come between Lilia and her Italian lover… her in-laws."
Where Angels Fear to Tread
Where Angels Fear to Tread

Where Angels Fear to Tread

6.3 | 1h48m | en | Drama

An English widow goes to Italy, falls in love with a dentist's son and marries him, against her straitlaced family's wishes.

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6.3 | 1h48m | en | Drama , Romance | More Info
Released: June. 21,1991 | Released Producted By: LWT , Sovereign Pictures Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

An English widow goes to Italy, falls in love with a dentist's son and marries him, against her straitlaced family's wishes.

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Cast

Rupert Graves , Helen Mirren , Helena Bonham Carter

Director

Simona Fanti

Producted By

LWT , Sovereign Pictures

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Reviews

Armand About love and disillusion. About different worlds and small gestures. A movie about few British characters and some Italian drops. In final, flavor of old letters. A adaptation with a seductive Helen Mirren and same Bonham Carter. Rupert Graves - piece of same play, childish, fragile and gray. So, nothing new. A E. M. Forster at right place, with usual ingredients and known recipes. But it is correct. For public, for lost emotions, for circle of silence and nice hour. Than, not a surprise. Only game for need to discover warm colors, lessons of life in tender sauce, words of a feeling and same traces of our time in the respiration of sentiments in a space - material for ordinary dreams.
knagao-1 Where Angels Fear To Tread, a fine novel in its own right, is transferred to the big screen with wit and a painter's eye by the masterful Charles Sturridge. Against a backdrop rich in Edwardian England's own brand of stuffy propriety, we watch cultures and mores clash, with poignant, and occasionally hilarious results. Judy Davis delivers one of my top ten moments on film, a snit of epic self-righteousness, in a memorable scene at the opera. The beauty of the film lies in its fluid and compassionate depiction of the wrongheadedness and confusion which ensue when foreign travelers pack their own narrow values next to the toothpaste, granting themselves permission to brandish them in the face of every long-suffering local along the way. Luckily for us, the film is populated by a believable group of finely drawn characters, played by actors who simply could not be better cast.
SMHowley The story is so tragic that this should be a hard-core drama, and parts of it are very poignant, but I also laughed hysterically. This is mainly due to Judy Davis' performance which is so priggish and delightful. Graves and Bonham-Carter played brother and sister in 'A Room With A View' and their chemistry carries over into this film quite well. The music is enchanting. All the way around, a great film.
Tanechka Charles Sturridge's adaption of E.M. Forster's classic novel is well in line with such other greats as "Howards End", "A Room With a View", and "A Passage To India". As with all of Forster's work, "Where Angels Fear to Tread" treats the topic of Edwardian British society with poignancy and humour.Cultures clash when Philip Herriton is forced by his mother to retrieve the only child of his dead sister-in-law, Lilia, from its Italian father. The baby represents both the English and Italian way of life, and the ensuing struggle over it is an analysis of just how futile our own nativist prejudices can be.Such a sensitive topic is dealt with by a charming cast. Rupert Graves is perfect as a man transformed by his horrific experiences; Helen Mirren is both laughable and lamentable as the tragically flighty Lilia; Helena Bonham-Carter is the soul of goodness, and Judy Davis (a Forster veteran from "A Passage to India") provides comic relief as stuffy Harriet. These fine performances are matched with a beautiful score by Rachel Portman and even more beautiful Italian vistas courtesy of Mr. Sturridge.Stimulating and provocative, I highly recommend this film to those interested in either Forsters' work or the imperialistic inclinations of the British circa 1900.