April 5, 1992
Miramax
Comedy, Drama, Romance, Historical
VHS
A-
In reviewing the book on which this is based, http://rereadingeverybookiown.blogspot.com/2012/04/enchanted-april.html, I said that I'd probably give the movie a B+. But on this, my first viewing in about four years, I found it was even better than I remembered. Yes, I'm still not entirely satisfied with how the husbands are handled, but the film is nonetheless, as Lottie puts it, a tub of love. I kept thinking the word "beautiful" again and again. The movie was shot for television but then released for the big screen, and of course I watch it on TV, on one of three VHS tapes that my ex-husband and I made (we were both big fans), but you could probably watch it on a smart device and still see how lush the scenery is, how the women (even Mrs. Fisher) look like living, breathing paintings.
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And the dialogue and narration are in turns sweet, funny, and heart-breaking. It may well be the movie I own with the least action (even what would develop into a fight scene or a robbery in another story has a happy or at least comedic ending). It's a reflective, vacation-like movie, and yet there is an undercurrent of sadness, with these characters hurt by loss of love. Yet Spring means rebirth.
I came to this movie originally because of my fanhood of Josie Lawrence (physically but not spiritually miscast as Lottie). She's quite lovable on the British comedy-game show Whose Line Is It Anyway?, and she's equally lovable here, although Lottie seems to have little in common with her, other than a tendency to say things she didn't intend to. The rest of the cast is generally strong, but she still stands out as the heart of this movie.
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