| | | What imprisons desires of the heart? Features: DVD, Widescreen, Dolby Digital (5.1), Spanish, French, Subtitled Academy Award nominee Julianne Moore (Hannibal, Boogie Nights) and Dennis Quaid (The Rookie, Frequency) star in this seductive story of a seemingly perfect family, and the forbidden desires that threaten to tear them apart. Cathy Whitaker (Moore) has it all-a lovely home, two wonderful children and a handsome husband (Quaid), who is successfully climbing the corporate ladder. But Cathy's idyllic existence is just an illusion, and she is eventually forced to choose between living a lie or following her heart. Academy Award nominee Moore "is a vision," declared Rex Reed, and he called Quaid's performance "the best of his career," in this stunning drama hailed by the New York Post as "one of the year's best." "Rarely does there come along a movie of such quality on so many levels." Robin Clifford, Reeling Reviews "Perhaps the year's most daring and fully realized movie." Lou Lumenick, New York Post "...a dazzling conceptual feat, but more than that, it's a work of enthralling drama." Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly "Julianne Moore and Dennis Quaid "Give The Performances of Their Careers!" Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
 Editor's Note
 The model marriage of Frank (Dennis Quaid) and Cathy Whitaker (Julianne Moore) in 1950s Hartford is depicted in television ads, and a magazine features photographs of Cathy as a model homemaker and citizen. Yet, behind the curtains of their dream home, Cathy and Frank hide scandalous secrets. Frank has been masquerading his homosexuality and is seeing a doctor for a heterosexual conversion. Meanwhile, Cathy finds solace in her gardener, Raymond (Dennis Haysbert), a black man about whom Cathy must conceal her growing feelings, since simply being seen with him is cause for scandal.Filmmaker Douglas Sirk employed the trappings of the melodrama to satirize and criticize narrow minds in the 1950s status quo with films such as ALL THAT HEAVEN ALLOWS. Todd Haynes (SAFE) uses Sirk's highly stylized universe to critique society half a century later in FAR FROM HEAVEN. The film uses thematic elements of Sirk's such as isolating characters through windows and vivid, symbolic colors and flowers. It also applies Sirkian plot devices such as gossiping neighbors and demonizing television. Attacking prejudice, Haynes' methods are particularly effective as he uses an antiquated style of filmmaking to shed light on societal problems that are pervasive even in the 21st Century.
| Features | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 5.1; French Dolby Digital Surround |  | Subtitles: Spanish, French |  | Anatomy Of A Scene Featurette |  | Feature Commentary With Director Todd Haynes |  | A Filmmaker's Experience With Julianne Moore And Todd Haynes |  | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |  | The Making Of Far From Heaven |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Universal |
 | Release Date: 8/24/2004 |
 | Running Time: 108 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2002 |  | Catalog ID: 22456 |  | UPC: 00025192245626 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English, French Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: French, Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | 1.85:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Oscar (2003) |  | Edward Lachman, Nominee, Best Achievement in Cinematography |  | Elmer Bernstein, Nominee, Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score |  | Julianne Moore, Nominee, Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role |  | Todd Haynes, Nominee, Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen |
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| | Professional Reviews | Entertainment Weekly "...FAR FROM HEAVEN is nothing short of a masterpiece....It seems, in a single visionary stroke, to have taken the spirit of American independent cinema and brought it full circle back to the soul of vintage Hollywood..." 09/27/2002 p.49-54Hollywood Reporter "...It's a bold experiment....[With a] terrific look and perfectly pitched performances..." 09/03/2002 p.20 Rolling Stone "...A gorgeously overheated imitation of life..." 10/19/2002 p.114 Variety "...An accomplished marriage of elaborate style and content....The film is a jewel on every technical level. Its visual sumptuousness seduces from the opening frame to the last..." 09/09/2002 p.29 Box Office "...[Moore gives an] extraordinarily nuanced performance..." 11/01/2002 p.126-7 New York Times "...Ardent and intelligent....Mr. Haynes is fiercely devoted to his actors....It discover the aching, desiring humanity in a genre -- and a period....In a word, it's divine..." 11/08/2002 p.E1 USA Today "...Haynes gets the look and feel right...FAR FROM HEAVEN also has emotional force..." 11/08/2002 p.7E Total Film "Julianne Moore is excellent." 01/01/2004 p.121 Uncut "Quaid won numerous awards....Arguably his richest performance." 03/01/2005 p.65 The Village Voice 10 of 10 Sirk is a figure who has thrived on exegesis, his own and others'. For those familiar with the Sirkian text, Haynes (like Mark Rappaport in Rock Hudson's Home Movies) has done a splendid job of filmed film criticism. Without resorting to camp or parody, Haynes (like Sirk, but differently) has transformed the rhetoric of Hollywood melodrama into something provocative, rich, and strange. For those who are not Sirk-literate, Far From Heaven may seem even more startling-a full-bodied simulation of a genre that, historically speaking, should no longer exist. It may well be the American movie of the year. - J. Hoberman Chicago Sun-Times 10 of 10 Because the film deliberately lacks irony, it has a genuine dramatic impact; it plays like a powerful 1957 drama we've somehow never seen before. The effect is oddly jolting: Contemporary movies take so many subjects for granted that they never really look at them. Haynes, by moving back in time, is able to bring his issues into focus. We care about the characters in the way its period expected us to. - Roger Ebert James Berardinelli's ReelViews 9 of 10 Haynes' style and approach draw the viewer in gently, but firmly. Once we are established in the seemingly-perfect world of Cathy and Frank, he allows their marriage and their lives to unravel before our eyes. Far From Heaven is not "realistic" in the traditional sense of the word (Haynes calls it "hyper-realistic"), but the emotions of the characters are genuine, and we feel for them and with them. In the end, Far From Heaven tells a simple story, but there's nothing remotely simple about the impact it has upon the viewer. - James Berardinelli
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