A trifle.
Being Julia (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:120
Fresh:91
Rotten:29
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Annette Bening delivers a captivating performance in Being Julia, a sophisticated comedy that follows a 1930s stage diva who experiences an identity crisis at age 40.
Theatrical Release:19-11-2004
Synopsis: As she enters her early 40s, London theater actress Julia Lambert (Annette Bening) starts having a nervous breakdown. She still rules the West End, but is growing too old for ingenue parts. When... As she enters her early 40s, London theater actress Julia Lambert (Annette Bening) starts having a nervous breakdown. She still rules the West End, but is growing too old for ingenue parts. When Tom Fennell (Shaun Evans), an adoring lad half her age, comes into her life, a clandestine affair begins. Though she's happy for a while, Julia eventually winds up in a face-off with a Tom's other, much younger lover (Lucy Punch). Luckily, the spirit of Julia's cantankerous old acting coach (London theater legend Michael Gambon) follows Julia around offering some tough-love encouragement. Set in the late 1930s, this is a fine costume comedy-drama about the sorrows and joys of art. The eternal question of "when am I acting and when am I myself?" has seldom been addressed as intelligently as it is here; Bening seems to be not only tangling with her own status as an aging beauty, but also with the limits of her own acting abilities, and it's a pleasure to see her transcend both with such triumphant exuberance. Bravo, Miss Bening, and kudos to director Szabó (MEPHISTO) for rendering his obvious love of theater, cinema, and actors with such contagious warmth. Other fine performances include Jeremy Irons as Julia's manager/husband and Juliet Stevens as her jaded maid. [More]
Starring: Annette Bening, Jeremy Irons, Lucy Punch, Shaun Evans
Starring: Annette Bening, Jeremy Irons, Lucy Punch, Shaun Evans, Bruce Greenwood, Miriam Margolyes, Juliet Stevenson, Maury Chaykin, Michael Gambon
Director: István Szabó
Director: István Szabó
Screenwriter: Ronald Harwood
Producer: Robert Lantos
Composer: Mychael Danna
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Being Julia
It examines the oddity of a life of performances as a veritable crowdpleaser, becoming frothier and funnier as it progresses.
Just because it's meringue does not mean that there are not genuine pleasures to be found in this light comedy.
Conveys the confusion of real life roles that women are pressured to play out in society to please others, and in contradiction with their own natural desires.
Bening is positively incandescent. The rest of the movie doesn't match her, but then there are not many that could.
Not the stodgy costume drama it may appear to be...To Bening's triumph, the audience can only love Julia, warts and all, by picture's end.
An intelligently witty comedy that boasts the sort of performance from Annette Bening that had wags predicting an Academy Award nomination months ago.
I liked the movie in its own way, while it was cheerfully chugging along, but the ending let me down.
Bening makes the movie into something finer still. She digs into a pagoda-size heap of roles and roles-within-roles and pulls them all out, one by one, deftly.
May lack originality but makes up for it in sheer bravado and really nice clothes.
Bravo - Ms. Bening, your new diva crown is waiting. What a performance.
The 1930s touches, including a selection of background music, are beguiling.
Boasting a bewitching performance by Annette Bening as a 1930s theater queen who rules the West End as Victoria did her empire, Being Julia is a feather-light diversion about a creature who acts her life and lives her roles.
Bening’s performance brings everything up to a level of brilliance...
As a glossy, brainless divertissement, as devoid of substance as the cardboard characters it's about, it will serve.
It’s a dish of a role for a dish of a gal, seemingly tailored for Bening.
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