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starring: Ralph Fiennes, Rosemary Harris, Rachel Weisz, Jennifer Ehle, Deborah Kara Ungerdirected by: István Szabó
List Price: $19.99Amazon.com's Price: $15.49 You Save: $4.50 (23%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780792169956
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0792169956
Label: Paramount
Manufacturer: Paramount
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Paramount
Region Code: 1
Release Date: May 08, 2001
Running Time: 181 minutes
Sales Rank: 18457
Studio: Paramount
Theatrical Release Date: 1999
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Although Sunshine was made by a Hungarian, István Szabó, and deals with the history of Hungary as refracted through three generations of a Jewish-Hungarian family, you might be more inclined to give it three hours of your own life if you approach it as a David Lean movie in spirit. It is an English-language picture, and Maurice Jarre's music recalls his score for Doctor Zhivago. Szabó emulates Lean's intimate-epic style of merging the sweep of history with the crystalline detailing of individual lives, so that the shape of destiny is glimpsed through personal moments that feel at once evanescent and eternal. His lighting cameraman, Lajos Koltai, is one of the handful of cinematographers equal to capturing these moments in lapidary images--cinematic sunshine of the highest order.
'Sunshine' is a literal translation of Sonnenschein, the family name of the central characters. And 'destiny' is one meaning of Sors, the name three Sonnenschein offspring choose for themselves to better assimilate as subjects of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Two are brothers, Ignatz (Ralph Fiennes) and Gustave (James Frain); their sister (by adoption) Valerie (Jennifer Ehle) is really their cousin. Both men love her, and Ignatz rocks the ultratraditional family by taking her as his wife. Nevertheless, the Sonnenscheins and the Sors enter upon the 20th century in loving solidarity, grateful to live under a liberal and tolerant regime. That's all swept away by the Great War, the rise of Nazism, and its replacement, the new fascism of Stalinist Communism. Valerie survives them all--though she's played later on by Rosemary Harris, Ehle's own mother. For his part--or parts--Ralph Fiennes goes on to embody two later generations of Sonnenschein/Sors men, the proudly patriotic Adam and his son, the rudderless Ivan, whose guilt over being a compliant prisoner at Auschwitz leads him to buy into the passionate puritanism of the Stalinist purges. Fiennes rises to the awesome challenge of creating three utterly distinct characters who all share the same congenital weaknesses and aching potential for greatness.
This is a film of considerable beauty and sometimes shattering power. Even three hours is not enough to do justice to all the characters, all the wrenching turnarounds of history and political allegiance and rectitude. But the film is never less than gripping, and as an essay on 'family values,' it's well-nigh definitive. --Richard T. Jameson
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - It's a FIENNE'S Movie, but only for FIENNES.
This motion picture has the honor of being the longest film ever made, an achievement originally held by Chris Nolan's `Dark Knight' in 2008 and then broken by Sunshine in 2001.
This film was made for and will only appeal to fans of Ralph Fiennes. I cannot imagine any other reason to ever watch it, other than if maybe you needed to choose between having a root canal and watching something, like a certain movie. You know how sometimes people say, "I'd rather have a root canal than watch this." ... Read More
Rating: - Very little payoff
Although this movie is beautifully filmed, I felt disappointed in the end and wished that I hadn't spent three hours watching it. It is interesting from a historical point of view, but there is only one genuinely good character in this movie (the father) and he dies fairly close to the beginning. Other characters seem to change drastically with no explanation. You have to sit through a gruesome torture scene and several incredibly ridiculous sex scenes and to me, in the end, it just wasn't worth it. ... Read More
Rating: - What an experience!
Even though this film is three hours long, it was so powerful and engrossing that the time flew by in the blink of an eye. Instead of wasting time setting up characters and a premise before really launching into the meat of the story, it pretty much begins immediately, drawing the viewer in right away as opposed to gradually building up more and more of an interest level. It also drew me in right away because I'm very interested in Hungarian history, and just love long epic films, particularly if they're ... Read More
Rating: - Very Touching
The scenes in the concentration camp are so haunting and beautifully done, they have stayed with me for years. It's a wonderful story and I have watched it over and over.
Rating: - A Wannabe Classic with absolutely no soul
First of all, if you like your Epic Movies with a generous sprinkling of gratuitous sex scenes with lots of moaning and simulated climaxing, then this is the film for you. For a movie that so obviously aspires to be another "Schindler's List", this was the final nail in the coffin. I cannot believe the glowing reviews here - at best, this was like a two star TV Movie that started off as a miniseries but ended up becoming a full fledged motion picture. This may have worked for "Mulholland Drive" but it does ... Read More
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