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Book of Love
 
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Book of Love (2003)

Starring: Frances O'Connor (II), Simon Baker Director: Alan Brown (XI) Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
2.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Total List Price: $57.93
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  • This item: Book of Love DVD ~ Frances O'Connor (II)

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Product Details

  • Actors: Frances O'Connor (II), Simon Baker, Gregory Smith, Bryce Dallas Howard, Joanna Adler
  • Directors: Alan Brown (XI)
  • Format: Color, Dolby, DVD, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: English
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: Sundance
  • DVD Release Date: April 26, 2005
  • Run Time: 83 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0007R4TJE
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #36,511 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Book of Love takes what could be a trashy premise and turns it into a strikingly honest examination of human messiness. Elaine (Frances O'Connor, Mansfield Park) and David (Simon Baker, The Ring Two) are a happy, successful couple who befriend a clever, athletic, but lonely 16 year-old boy named Chet (Gregory Smith, Everwood). But when Chet falls in love with Elaine, she responds and sleeps with him out of a mix of sympathy and desire. From here the story could have become overwrought melodrama, but the subtle script, perfectly-pitched performances, and lucid direction make Book of Love a portrait of smart, articulate people at the mercy of their least articulate emotions: lust, jealousy, anger, fear. Writer/director Alan Brown, making his debut feature film, even manages to weave in issues of goodness and the history of Cambodia without the movie ever feeling academic or didactic--on the contrary, the movie feels intimate and physical throughout, as concerned with the character's animal responses as with their struggle to remain rational. Also featuring Bryce Dallas Howard (The Village) and music from indie bands The Magnetic Fields and Clem Snide. --Bret Fetzer

Product Description
Elaine and David seem to have the perfect marriage. But everything changes when they meet Chet, an innocent 15 year old boy full of youthful wonder. The threesome form an immediate bond, but a momentary lapse in judgment threatens to rupture the core of the trio's seemingly idyllic lives. A sensual tale of the complexity of marriage and desire, Book Of Love examines the choices we make in our daily lives-and the consequences that follow.

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "She doesn't want you anymore!", April 30, 2005
By M. J Leonard "MikeonAlpha" (Silver Lake, Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
When does one know when a marriage is over? Can a relationship survive the murky waters of infidelity? When do two people release that they're no longer in love? These are questions posed in Book of Love, a smart, perceptive, and engrossing domestic drama that features three of the most astonishingly naturalistic and nuanced performances in recent years.

Book of Love focuses on the tiny stories, the little moments in life where an expression or an action can have enormous and profound significance, whether it's a sight of a fifteen-year-old's swim-toned abs as he pulls of a sweatshirt, a young, impressionable student staring wide-eyed at her teacher, or the look of longing on a woman's face as ponders committing adultery while her husband sleeps in a hammock in the back yard.

High-school history teacher David Walker (Simon Baker) and his events-planner wife Elaine (Frances O'Connor) appear to have the perfect life - a lovely house, good jobs, and a close marriage. We first meet them when they are participating in the intimate routines of every day life - he is going to the toilet, and she is checking out her figure in the mirror. They're an attractive couple, but while she's kept a hard body through yoga, he's gone a little soft around the middle-too little exercise and too much ice cream. Their lives have reached that point where passion is slowly being replaced by contentment; they're still in love but their marriage has shifted and they now know each other so well that a slight touch or look will suffice.

One hot summer day they decide to drop into the local ice cream shop where they meet the 15-year-old Chet (Gregory Smith). Chet, a champion swimmer, possesses a hormone driven sexually aggressive worldliness that seems to capture them both. It doesn't take long for the couple to take an instant liking to him. Elaine initially feels sorry for the boy, his mother is dead, his father works all the time and he is somewhat isolated at school. But Elaine is also subliminally attracted to him, and she underhandedly decides to take him under her wing.

Discovering that he's never been out of New Jersey - he's never even been on a plane - the couple asks him to a Manhattan nightclub to watch a friend sing, and then invite him to dinner at their home. After making some tentative plans to take him to Disney world, the three settle down to a candle lit dinner. Despite his age, Elaine serves the boy several glasses of wine. While David is in a drunken asleep, Chet tries to kiss Elaine.

At first she rebuffs him but he comes by the next day and she immediately gives into the passions that have so sadly begun to dwindle in her marriage. David is shattered when he finds about the indiscretion, his reaction a strange mixture of part titillation and part anger. However, he manages to pull it all together and decides to keep his promise to Chet by paying for them all to go to Disney World.

The pleasure of this film is watching the subtle changes that take place between Elaine and David. The affair precipitates many hidden agendas and ultimately rocks the already deceptively fragile marriage: David wants to start a family with Elaine, but Elaine is far more concerned with maintaining her girlish, trim figure; one night she even tells David "lets have children in about ten years time." But David's paternal instincts are unleashed when he is asked by a lesbian friend to become her sperm donor. He's initially hesitant, but later on in the movie, he seems to warm to the idea.

The problem is that Elaine views Chet, as some kind of equal when in actuality he's not. He may be rapaciously horny, but he has no real life experience behind him. He's eager to be initiated into the world of adults, but Elaine makes a grave miscalculation when she decides to sleep with him. Not only is she in danger of being arrested, but also she's remarkably naïve to think that the dalliance won't have devastating emotional consequences for her marriage.

Writer director Alan Brown makes some sharp observations about married life, human relationships, and how seemingly well-ordered lives can quietly implode almost over night. The three central performances are terrific, and it's interesting to see Australians Simon Baker and Francis O'Connor taking on such emotionally complex roles in the USA. The attractive Baker is terrific as Dave, an affable, likeable and perceptive man who tries drastically to repress the hurt, bitterness, and ugly emotions that lurk beneath his placid exterior.

Dave is worried about his entry into middle age, constantly checking his love handles out in the mirror and trying to control his surroundings with little habits like correcting the grammar of those around him. O'Connor realistically portrays a woman who is 28 and is in no hurry to give up her youth; she's remarkably honest about her desires, and has the courage to actually "own" her indiscretions. And Gregory Smith as Chet does a great job of showing how far a hormonally driven teenager will go to satisfy his desires.

The film opens and closes with a Cambodian girl working on a loom. Perhaps this symbolizes how our lives are intertwined and entangled, and although it's a nice touch it comes across as a bit too conceptual and self-consciously arty. However, Book of Love has a subtle emotional impact that gradually creeps up on you, and stays long after the movie has finished. Viewers, will for sometime, probably find themselves questioning the motivations of the various characters and pondering the unhappy and rather bittersweet resolution to the story. Mike Leonard April 05.
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19 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Desires beneath the Surface, May 5, 2005
"Book of Love" is a moderately engaging tale of the effects of adultery on the three principal characters.

Elaine Walker (played by Frances O'Connor) is a 27-year old event planner who likes her yoga and wants to be child-free for another ten years. Her husband, David (played by Simon Baker), a history teacher at a girls' school, has slowly been gaining weight and wants a family. Getting ice cream cones, they are served by Chet, an almost-16-year old high school swimmer working part-time (played by Gregory Smith). Incidentally Elaine gets a look at Chet's tight abs and is impressed. Another visit for ice cream leads to a dinner invitation. Chet hasn't traveled much; so the couple takes him to New York City and promise to take him to Disneyworld. Elaine shortly gives into Chet's desire, after which Elaine tells her husband.

David, though visibly upset, tries to rise above the situation and says he wants to fulfill his promise for the couple to take Chet to Disneyworld. Although both Elaine and Chet have deep misgivings, the three fly down to Orlando and check into a motel with pool. There the anger of David and the wishful thinking of Chet make an appearance, with maybe some other undercurrents. Seeing this, Elaine freezes up. The film heads toward its conclusions.

There are two useful subplots, one involving a student with a crush on David and the other with a lesbian couple wanting David to be a sperm donor. Both subplots give insight on David's character.

None of the three principal characters is forthright in expressing feelings or wants to discuss issues. The dialogue is directed at surface events and is meant to convey an acceptable social exterior. This means the viewer has to watch the body language carefully and has to create theories for the motivations of the characters. There is room for interpretation and for feeling some answers are missing.

All three main actors do a fine job. Chet and David provide frequent skin scenes. The story makes sense on an emotional level.

The main annoyance is ongoing conversation and short scenes on Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge. This does not propel the story. Also, Chet's resolution feels too arty and forced.

Other than the trailer, the DVD extras are especially poor. Director Alan Brown gives two mini-interviews in which the take-home content is that stuff happens to people beyond their control and that actor Baker gained weight for the role of David and would be taking it off.

A pretty good film, high 3 or low 4. I gave the 4 because I liked Gregory Smith as Chet.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Fresh material, bad encoding, September 1, 2005
By Andrew Siew (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
A movie of this nature generally draws extreme reviews, good and bad; personally I don't find it to be particularly bad or good nor can I relate to it, but i think potential buyers may like to know the fact that the film transfer was done rather badly for this DVD, which is worse than Dreamwork's "Forces of Nature" back in 1997. Dark scenes (like the one in the bar) looked extremely washed out and the resolution of the video was something between a VHS and a pre-1995 Laserdisc.

I would suggest anyone who's interested in this title to rent it first before considering purchasing.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Shocking and fascinating premis
Some of the plot surprised even me.....Very provocative.

Michael Travis Jasper
author of the novel, "To Be Chosen"
Published 5 months ago by Michael Travis Jasper

2.0 out of 5 stars Close
BOOK OF LOVE is one of those first time films that becomes an "Official Selection" for The Sundance Festival and then goes to DVD.Alan Brown wrote and directed his feature. Read more
Published 17 months ago by KerrLines

3.0 out of 5 stars HIGH ASPIRATIONS - MIXED DELIVERY
I'm always drawn to complicated love, and despite some reviewers' below, the storyline is less plausible than many would say. Read more
Published on April 16, 2007 by L. S. Slaughter

2.0 out of 5 stars Didn't Buy the Storyline.
There were far too many situations in this film that were simply ridiculous. First, I didn't buy the idea of a wife openly flirting with a 15-year-old without her husband having... Read more
Published on January 7, 2007 by Robert Byrd

1.0 out of 5 stars bland, insipid, pointless and pretentious
This flick naivishly glorifies infidelity and portrays a skewed, contemptible version of human relationships in a bland, insipid fashion. Read more
Published on December 7, 2005 by Omkar

1.0 out of 5 stars Rubbish
This is one of the worst films I ever saw. If it has a story line, it seems to be that human beings are always worthless and untrustworthy. Read more
Published on August 2, 2005 by Silverguy Smith

4.0 out of 5 stars Ménage a Trois, but on whose terms?
If three can play at love, and if that love is an equilateral triangle, then each of the three is equally responsible for the ramifications. Read more
Published on April 29, 2005 by Grady Harp

5.0 out of 5 stars Good Movie
Good movie at first then starts to get weird between a student and two teachers otherwise then that good movie.
Published on April 3, 2005 by blugreen

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