Mr. & Mrs. Bridge
Cast :Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward
Director :James Ivory
Studio :Buena Vista Home Vid
Format :Color, Closed-captioned
Released Date :January 01, 1990
DVD Released Date :January 04, 2005
Language :English (Dubbed)
Audience Rating :PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateMarch 12, 2005
SummaryGeneration gap pre-WWII
Content
There is so much good to say about "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge." As usual, the Merchant/Ivory team produce quality work that looks good, sounds good, plays well, and makes the viewer both think and feel. It draws us in and gets us involved with the characters. Although the stories are often slight, the characters involved wouldn't think so because this is their lives we're watching. This production team knows how to thrive in this setting, and this film is no exception. Trying to pin down the relationship between the title characters is as elusive as with any real people, which is a rare and wonderful thing in the entertainment world. Too often writers and directors feel they have to bludgeon us over the head with messages and obvious black/white issue statements that preach.

Mr. & Mrs. Bridge obviously love each other dearly; he is wholly devoted to her, faithful, protective, and tender to a fault so that she is sheltered. Consequently their children have little respect for her, the rich lady with a maid who fusses over them like children as they go off to college, to a career, or to war. Mr. & Mrs. Bridge are not comfortable with the way society around them is changing.

There are a huge number of beautifully understated moments in the screenplay and in its onscreen execution. Every moment feels authentic....except that I can't get over the feeling that Paul Newman is awfully miscast in this role. Mr. Bridge is so uptight he squeaks when he walks, and it's not his shoes. This is not the Paul Newman we know from a long career of playing hustlers, con men, and disreputable scalawags. Although he often manages to pull off the extremely responsible Mr. Bridge, it's often difficult for the audience to get past seeing him race cars, shoot pool, or dig a ditch on a chain gang as we have over the years. Some actors could pull this off; Newman falls just short. Fortunately he is surrounded by others who wear their characters as neatly as he wears his suit. Newman playing the title role really interferes with the story.

Worse than that is the ending, which basically comes out of nowhere. There is no payoff, emotional or otherwise; it simply feels like the film broke during the final reel and the projectionist simply brought up the house lights rather than fix it. This also comes at the end of a scene that begins equally abruptly, as if something important had wound up on the cutting room floor, when the Bridges' son shows up in Air Corps uniform although the audience is never told he had been anywhere but at home, and apparently several months or years have passed. The whole ending act is thus completely out of kilter...and then it's over.

Newman's past history and the final act of the film, however, don't ruin a remarkable character study in repression, rebellion, and self-control to the point of anal retention. "Mr. & Mrs. Bridge" is a most remarkable film that can be greatly enjoyed by any intelligent person over age 25; I doubt many younger folks would have matured enough to appreciate the subtleties of the characters, their situations, and their relationships. And in the end, that's all this film is about.

Rating
DateFebruary 26, 2005
SummarySome bridges to cross ...
Content
It's hard not to at least admire "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge." Everyone in the cast delivers a great performance (although I'm not sure Joanne Woodward should have been nominated for a Best Actress Oscar). Some cool scenes, some tense scenes, some heartbreaking scenes ... but ultimately, I think, somewhat cold and distant. UNLESS this was the desired effect. In that case ... yes, perfect in every way.

Rating
DateNovember 23, 2003
SummaryTWO GREAT ACTORS CAN MAKE INTERESTING A CONVENTIONAL MOVIE.
Content
"Mr. And Mrs. Bridge" stars Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, playing a 1940 marriage. This is a conventional drama with excellent performances, the characters are nothing out of this world, they are a bunch of characters very similar to real life people, the story is not very original, it's just a bunch of rich people living a conventional life, but these two great actors carried on their shoulders the weight of an otherwise uninteresting movie, making "Mr. And Mrs. Bridge" an enjoyable movie.

Basically this is the story of the struggle between two generations, the iron hand discipline of a stiff father and the "rebellion" of his daughter and son who want to escape from the monotony of the life of their parents. And trapped in the middle is Mrs. Bridge, who even though she mostly obeys her husband, once in a while she likes to try new things to inject happiness to her life.

"Mr. And Mrs. Bridge" is an entertaining movie thanks to the performances of Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward.


Rating
DateJune 29, 2003
SummaryOh my God it's my Aunt Marjorie!
Content
Anyone who is originally from the Midwest has a Mrs. Bridge in the family, maybe not as affluent, but just as dippy and helpless. Mrs. Bridge knows enough to resent vaguely her helplessness and the fact that Mr. Bridge makes all of her decisions for her. The viewer is sympathetic with her plight and starts to feel that Mr. Bridge is indeed being mean & unfair to her...but then Mrs. Bridge goes and does something that underscores her inability to cope for herself.

There were more scenes than I can count that just made me cringe, because I recognized my dippy Aunt Marjorie, again & again, in Mrs. Bridge. The spirit of Mrs. Bridge remains alive and well, even today.

This was a great character study of the two Bridges. The other members of the family, and some of the friends of the Bridges, are a bit fuzzier in their definition, but that is not all that important. This is a very engrossing movie in many respects.


Rating
DateAugust 14, 2001
Summary2 thumbs up
Content
If you are looking for violence, lots of sex and fast cars, wrong movie! But if you are looking for a thought provoking, tender, poignant and often funny story, you've hit the jackpot. I am running out of adjectives for my two favorite actors (Newman and Woodward ought to be declared America's royalty) They shine here. Much deserved Oscar nomination for Woodward and should have been one for Newman, who never ceases to amaze. Blythe Danner is a plus as well. I thouroughly enjoyed it.
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