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CLICK HERE to see this clip with Groban's music! There is my favourite vids from the movie 'Possession' (2002), wich discovery of the secret affair of a Victorian poet Randolph Henry Ash (Jeremy Northam) and poetess Christabel LaMotte (Jennifer Ehle). 'Possession' is Neil LaBute's adaptation of the best-selling novel by A.S.Byatt. All the rights to video belong to Warner Bros. Pictures & USA films.
A visiting American scholar is paging through an old volume at the British Museum when he comes upon a letter stuffed between the pages--a love letter, it would appear, from Queen Victoria's poet laureate, addressed to a woman not his wife. The poet has been held up for more than a century as a model of marital fidelity. The letter is dynamite. The scholar slips the letter out of the book and into his portfolio, and is soon displaying it, with all the pride and uncertainly of a new father, to a British woman who knows (or thought she knew) everything about the poet.
The American, named Roland Michell (), is professionally ambitious but has a block against personal intimacy. Ultraman fighting evolution rebirth ps2 iso emuparadise. The British expert, named Maud Bailey (), is suspicious of love, suspicious of men, suspicious of theories that overturn a century of knowledge about her speciality. Together, warily, edgily, they begin to track down the possibility that the happily married Randolph Henry Ash did indeed have an affair with the 19th century feminist and lesbian Christabel LaMotte. Two modern people with high walls of privacy are therefore investigating two Victorians who in theory never even met. This setup from A.S.
Byatt's 1990 Booker Prize-winning novel would seem like the last premise in the world to attract director Neil LaBute, whose ' and 'Your Friends & Neighbors' were about hard-edged modern sexual warfare. But look again at the romantic fantasies in his overlooked ' (2000), about a housewife in love with a soap opera character and a killer in love with a photograph of the housewife, and you will see the same premise: Love, fueled by imagination, tries to leap impossible divides. The film, written by, and LaBute, uses a flashback structure to move between the current investigation and the long-ago relationship. Plays Ash, an upright public figure, and is Christabel, a pre-Raphaelite beauty who lives with the darkly sensuous Blanche Glover (). The nature of their relationship is one of the incidental fascinations of the movie: At a time before lesbianism was widely acknowledged, female couples were commonly accepted and the possibility of a sexual connection didn't necessarily occur. Blanche is the dominant and possessive one, and Christabel is perhaps not even essentially lesbian, but simply besotted with friendship. When she and Ash make contact, it is Blanche, not Ash's unbending wife, who is the angered spouse.
In the way it moves between two couples in two periods, 'Possession' is like Karel Reisz's ' (1981). That film, with a screenplay by, added a modern couple that didn't exist in the John Fowles novel, and had both couples played. The notion of two romances on parallel trajectories is common to both films, and intriguing because there seem to be insurmountable barriers in both periods. Ash and Christabel are separated by Victorian morality, his marriage and her relationship.
The moderns, Maud and Roland, seem opposed to any idea of romance; she has her own agenda, and he is reticent to a fault. 'You have nothing to fear from me,' he tells her early on, because he avoids relationships. Later, when they find themselves tentatively in each other's arms, he pulls back: 'We shouldn't be doing this; it's dangerous.' This might be convincing if Roland and Maud looked like our conventional idea of literary scholars:, perhaps, paired with.