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The Human Stain
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DVD detailsActor: Anthony Hopkins, Ed Harris, Gary Sinise, Nicole Kidman, Wentworth Miller Brand: Buena Vista Home Video DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 5.1; Spanish (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 5.1; French (Dubbed), Unknown Format: AC-3, Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.85:1 Running Time: 106 minutes Published: 2004-07-01 DVD Release Date: 2004-07-20 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Miramax Product features: - Academy Award(R) winners Anthony Hopkins (1991 Best Actor, THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS) and Nicole Kidman (2002 Best Actress, THE HOURS) along with Gary Sinise (FORREST GUMP) and Ed Harris (THE HOURS) star in the provocative mystery THE HUMAN STAIN. Coleman Silk (Hopkins) has a secret. A terrible 50-year-old secret that the esteemed college professor has kept hidden from everyone including his wife,
DVD Reviews of The Human StainDVD Review: Flawed but Interesting Summary: 4 Stars
During WWII, millions of Jews whose only crime in the eyes of some where their being Jewish. Thousands to over millions were sent into concentration camps where few survived and many were murdered, even the innocent of innocent, the children. Those Jews who managed to escape did so by fleeing to hopeful safe harbors in other countries, or, they passed. Far from passing to gain material wealth, power, and a share in the decadence of the predominant group, these Jews simply sought to survive and see another day. One cannot help but admire those who spent the rest of their lives, whenever possible, challenging racism and bigotry and injustice.The titled character in the HUMAN STAIN is far from being admirable and sympathetic. Coleman Silk is a black man who chooses to pass as white to enjoy the privileges of being white. He doesn't care to fight the injustices that deny his people their humanity, but instead chooses to cater and bow down in honor and the keeping of such injustice against his own people. Ironically, at the time he passes, those Jews who where unable to pass were being killed, entire families. Even more ironical, Silk chooses to pass as Jewish. He turns his back on his family, even after his mother in the movie pleads with him in what has to be the best emotionally intense moment in the movie. Seemingly without much conscious to morals, Silk starts his life new as a white man without anyone ever suspecting him as being anything other than this. He marries a white woman, begins a career as a college professor, lives the American dream of freedom without roadblocks. Life is pretty good until his wife dies and two black students accuse him of using a racial slur against them which is accidental and unintentional, but Silk so long denying his heritage does not realize the power and mistake of the word he has used. At this point, his mask begins to fall off and his past comes back to haunt him and it is not forgiving. The main problem with this film is the way the story is told. The makers would have done better to tell the story from the perspective of the young Silk instead of the old Silk who is played by Anthony Hopkins. Moreover, the character played by Nicole Kidman, who Silk begins a May/December relationship with in the midst of the Clinton sex scandel with a young intern, seems to pollute the storyline and burden it down. Kidman plays her part well, as the entire cast is excellent, but her character should have been exercised from the story on the big screen all together. It is the young Coleman Silk and his family who are the really interesting characters deserved more time on screen instead of only being seen in flashback scenes. The press for this movie was a lesson in the racial divide that is growing in the U.S. The press took more of an interest in seeing how quick the guy who played young Silk, Wentworth Miller, would distance himself from being black than they did in the moral questions raised in the movie or book of the same name by a white man. Sadly, they may have gotten what they wanted. I hope that I am wrong. I would take great pride in being wrong!!!!! and offer an apology for the misunderstanding of Miller. Rather than understanding the diversity of the black American community, that is, that black Americans are a multi-cultural people whose blood roots extend not just in Africa but also Europe and even Asia and all those places in between, regardless of the complexion of skin or of the skin or race of one or both parents--the cause of the huge color spectra among black Americans and blacks from North America to South America--, and, that black Americans are a people proud of their ancestry in all its diversity regardless of what only a handful of extremely bigoted afro-centralist don't want admitted and many white Americans refuse to take time to learn and understand, the press has played to its own blind and ignorant liberal bias that divides blacks Americans into dangerous social stratas of ethnicities. For his part, Miller, who doesn't deny his heritage like he has done in playing earlier roles in his career until the HUMAN STAIN, has shown a proclivity not to correct his interviewers and has legitimized their prejudices that the one drop rule of blood applies to all but a few of black Americans who have one non black American parent, political correctness at its most perverse and dangerous. Miller doesn't understand or doesn't want to understand that he is legitimizing racist fallacies. To those who choose to watch the movie, or even, read the book, keep in mind that the story is written from the view point of those or one person not in the know to all the nuances, diversity, complexity, pride, heartache and tragedy, joy, sometimes embarrassment, anger, struggle, bloodlines, and stories to the black American community no matter how sympathetic and understanding they claim to be.
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Description of The Human StainAcademy Award(R) winners Anthony Hopkins (1991 Best Actor, THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS) and Nicole Kidman (2002 Best Actress, THE HOURS) along with Gary Sinise (FORREST GUMP) and Ed Harris (THE HOURS) star in the provocative mystery THE HUMAN STAIN. Coleman Silk (Hopkins) has a secret. A terrible 50-year-old secret that the esteemed college professor has kept hidden from everyone ? including his wife, his children, and his down-and-out young lover (Kidman) ? and it's about to ruin his entire life. Given the formidable challenge of adapting Philip Roth's acclaimed novel to the screen, it's a wonder that The Human Stain retains so much of what makes Roth's novel a masterpiece. As adapted by Nicholas Meyer, Robert Benton's film is inevitably a different animal altogether, and it's wide open to charges of miscasting and thematic diffusion. But at its core, this delicate drama succeeds in exposing the sins that stain all of humanity, forcing men like former welterweight boxer and esteemed professor Coleman Silk (Anthony Hopkins) to forsake family and career to conceal his African American heritage. Light-skinned and passing as a Jewish professor of classics in a tony East Coast college, 71-year-old Silk sinks into scandal when an innocent remark is misinterpreted as a racist slur, and this--along with his affair with an illiterate 34-year-old janitor (Nicole Kidman), and friendship with a reclusive novelist (Gary Sinise)--forms the crux of Benton's multilayered inquiry into the oppressive aftershocks of guilt, shame, and mourning, and the effects of judgment (internal and external) on our ability to connect. Roth's novel was one thing, Benton's film is another. Despite differing degrees of success, both are worthy of praise. --Jeff Shannon
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