The
Hours Movie Review:
What
is The Hours? Which hours are they referring to? Maybe it
is just the hours that we get through in any given day.
Based
on the best-selling novel by Sean Cunningham, The Hours
is centered upon the classic novel "Mrs. Dalloway".
In 1923, Virginia Woolf (Nicole Kidman) is suicidal and
at a pivotable moment in her life as her great novel, "Mrs
Dalloway" is coming to fruition. Meanwhile in 1951,
housewife Laura Brown (Julianne Moore) is battling her own
war which is threatening to overwhelm her. Then finally
in 2001, Clarissa Vaughn (Meryl Streep), a gay woman is
preparing for a party to honor her author friend (Ed Harris)
who is struck with AIDS. Each woman is involved with the
novel in some way. One is writing it, another is reading
it and the final lady is living it. How will each woman
deal with her lifes battle? Who will win and who will
lose? So are the hours in these fractured lives.
The
Hours represents probably three of the best actresses working
in Hollywood today. It also almost shows a lineage or evolution
in these three actresses careers. Meryl Streep has
garnered infamy and been decorated many times in her career.
Julianne Moore is on the verge of being decorated in her
career and has already garnered infamy. Nicole Kidman is
the new-comer to prestige as she is waiting for her wake
of decoration. Each woman is deeply talented and deserves
the recognition.
For
me, the film was utterly uncomfortable and unbelievably
heavy to sit through. It felt like every inch or thread
of dialogue was rapt with emotion. I couldnt breathe
or feel comfortable watching it. I did find myself, over
time, being absorbed in one of the stories more than the
others. The whole story of Virginia Woolf intrigued me and
I wanted to learn more but the film kept showing the other
two stories as well. I found the whole 1951 story to be
confusing. What exactly was the womans problem? It
was hard to relate since I didnt know the time-period.
I did find myself relating to the 2001 story just before
the story climaxed. When it finally did I did find it interesting
but wasnt sure if it was a fair pay-off.
I do
hope that Nicole Kidman is looked at come Oscar time for
her portrayal of Virginia Woolf because I havent seen
better performance from an actress all year except maybe
Salma Hayek in "Frida".
The
Hours is a deep, enveloping movie about menopausal depression.
There is so much sadness and emotion wedged into this film
that it forgets to let the audience breathe once in a while.
Maybe too much of a good thing is too much. The Hours is
hard to forget but I am not sure if I recommend the journey.
(3
of 5)
So Says
the Soothsayer.
Dean
Kish
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