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The Piano
1993 -
Australia
/ France
- 120 min. -
Feature, Color
AMG Rating:
Director:
Jane Campion
Cast:
Holly Hunter,
Harvey Keite,
Sam Neill,
Anna Paquin,
Kerry Walker.
More Information:
All Movie Guide
Características del DVD
- Lang.: English / Sub.
in Spanish
Alquílela
por (rent it for): $3.77
(dos días - two days)
Si vive en
Weston (if you live in Weston)
Sinopsis
(All Movie Guide)
Writer/director
Jane Campion's
third feature unearthed emotional undercurrents and churning intensity in the
story of a mute woman's rebellion in the recently colonized New Zealand
wilderness of Victorian times. Ada McGrath (Holly
Hunter), a mute who has willed herself not to speak, and her strong-willed
young daughter Flora (Anna
Paquin) find themselves in the New Zealand wilderness, with Ada the
imported bride of dullard land-grabber Stewart (Sam
Neill). Ada immediately takes a dislike to Stewart when he refuses to
carry her beloved piano home with them. But Stewart makes a deal with his
overseer George Baines (Harvey
Keitel) to take the piano off his hands. Attracted to Ada, Baines agrees
to return the piano in exchange for a series of piano lessons that become a
series of increasingly charged sexual encounters. As pent-up emotions of rage
and desire swirl around all three characters, the savage wilderness begins to
consume the tiny European enclave. Campion imbues her tale with an over-ripe
tactility and a murky, poetic undertow that betray the characters' confined
yet overpowering emotions: Ada's buried sensuality, Baines' hidden tenderness,
and Stewart's suppressed anger and violence. The story unfolds like a Greek
tragedy of the Outback, complete with a Greek chorus of Maori tribesmen and a
blithely uncaring natural environment that envelops the characters like an
additional player. Campion directs with discreet detachment, observing one
character through the glances and squints of another as they peer through
wooden slats, airy curtains, and the spaces between a character's fingers. She
makes the film immediate and urgent by implicating the audience in characters'
gazes. And she guides Hunter to a revelatory performance of silent film
majesty. Relying on expressive glances and using body language to convey her
soulful depths, Hunter became a modern
Lillian Gish
and won an Oscar for her performance, as did Paquin and Campion for her
screenplay. Campion achieved something rare in contemporary cinema: a poetry
of expression told in the form of an off-center melodrama.
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