Skip over navigation

Sofa Cinema

Gifts - NEW  |   Help   |   Sign in

Vanity Fair (2004) Certificate PG

Vanity Fair
Play trailer

Sign up

Rated 3.0 stars
Average rating
(58%)
 
Starring: Reese Witherspoon | Eileen Atkins | Jim Broadbent | Gabriel Byrne | Romola Garai | Bob Hoskins | Rhys Ifans | James Purefoy | Jonathan Rhys Meyers
Director: Mira Nair
Studio: UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK VIDEO RENTAL
Run time: 141 mins
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Hearing-impaired: English
Released: May 16, 2005

Growing up poor in London, Becky Sharp (Witherspoon) defies her poverty-stricken background and ascends the social ladder alongside her best friend, Amelia.

Rating of 3 stars out of 5
Radio Times

It can't have been easy condensing William Makepeace Thackeray's sprawling, dense novel into a movie. Small wonder, then, that Mira (Monsoon Wedding) Nair's film is a little lacking in linear plot, being more a series of bitty scenes than a coherent narrative. But there's still much to admire in this nicely written (by Matthew Faulk, Mark Skeet and Gosford Park screenwriter Julian Fellowes) and handsomely mounted adaptation. Reese Witherspoon is surprisingly good as Becky Sharp, Thackeray's calculating, ambitious heroine. Her English accent is pretty useful, too. And James Purefoy, as the gambler she marries during her no-holds-barred bid for a better life, stands out in a starry supporting cast that also includes Gabriel Byrne, Eileen Atkins and Jim Broadbent.

Rating of 2 stars out of 5
Halliwell's Film Guide

Enjoyable adaptation that has been given a touch of the exotic, with an undue emphasis on India. The drawback is that Reece Witherspoon's Becky is too likeable; the character's ruthlessness has been suppressed.

Highest rated reviews

33 out of 45 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Great Film!!!

natalie gaskin from Ashford, Middlesex, 16th June, 2005

If you are a fan of Pride and Predudice and those sort of films, you will love this. Its a great period drama and it really draws you in to the story of a young girl orphaned when she was so young, that tries to make her way to a higher status and better life, following her close companion's up's and down's and the funny thing is Reece doesnt care who she treads on to get what she wants. Definatley for the ladies. RENT IT AND ENJOY!!!!

Read all highest rated reviews

14 out of 19 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Reese Witherspoon fans only

A Customer from Winchester, England, 23rd June, 2005

I must admit that I went into this adaptation of a much-loved novel with high hopes. In the back of my mind were splendid BBC adaptations from the 1980s and 1990s ? surely Hollywood could only do better? Sadly not! Unfortunately, Vanity Fair is a mammoth novel which simply cannot be done justice in the space of one film. Another problem is that it has two plots which, although they intertwine at points, are pretty much distinct. Here is where the film is at it?s weakest, reducing Amelia?s story to mere footnote in order to accommodate it?s star, Reese Witherspoon. And, after all that she isn?t particularly good as Becky Sharp. The actress playing Amelia acquits herself well, although they were unable to ?age? her sufficiently for the later scenes. Jonathan Rhys Meyers, James Purefoy and Rhys Ifans (surprisingly dashing as Dobbin; I didn?t recognise him) acquit themselves well, too, but the film spends far too much of its energy on the events leading up to the battle of Waterloo and then skips and skims rather unsatisfactorily over the next eighteen years. My advice, if you are looking for a real introduction to the novel then seek out on of the BBC DVDs, not this one.

Read all highest rated reviews

10 out of 10 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2.0 stars
For The Readers

Fortunatus from from Kinghorn, 4th April, 2007

This, I must argue, is a bad adaption of Thackeray's novel - a claim I make without having read it! The film struggles to get a grip on the story and the audience: it is badly paced, brushing over key episodes and emphasising trivialities; and the characters are sketchy, leaving us with no sympathy for their situation and no care for where the story takes them. I suggest this is a film for those who have read and enjoyed the book, and wish to see an adaption. Bringing this to the film will possibly give it more depth and meaning. I have given this film 2 stars, however, as, putting all of this to one side, elements of a good novel lurk below.

Read all highest rated reviews

10 out of 12 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2.0 stars
Vanity Fair (2004) Too Short

Sparkie from BRISTOL, England, 9th January, 2006

The BBC did a mini-series of Vanity Fair in 1967 (Susan Hampshire) & again in 1998 (Natasha Little). ............... This version has Reese Witherspoon playing Becky Sharp, & while having an American actress play the young woman trying to get into English society does translate into a sense that she is clearly on the outside, she does not really convey the amorality of the character. ............... In this version Becky comes across as mild rather than sharp. This is not because such a charecterisation is an inevitable result when a story that is perfectly suited to the length of a mini-series is cut down to 2 hours 20 minutes, but rather because director Mira Nair & Witherspoon want Becky to be more likeable. ............... However, given that this results in Becky losing her edge, I think it ends up being the film's flaw.

Read all highest rated reviews

Most recent reviews

Rated 2.0 stars
frustratingly dull

A Customer from Winchester, 16th January, 2010

This film never captures your imagination - reese plays herself somehow and the film seems to be missing some scenes essential to the plot - maybe it is OK if you know the book and can see the film as illustrations - no good as a stand alone story at all.

Read all recent reviews

Rated 5.0 stars
Beautiful!

BeckySharp from , 8th January, 2010

Beautiful adaptation of Thackeray's novel. While it doesn't equal the 90s BBC version, squashing some important plot points, it is gorgeously shot. Mira Nair's direction is pitch perfect and the cast are fab - Reese Witherspoon is a devilish Becky. If you like this watch the BBC version too!

Read all recent reviews

Rated 1.0 stars
Boring dross

A Customer from London, 8th January, 2010

I love a good historical romp but this one I just didn't warm to.

Read all recent reviews

Rated 4.0 stars
Pure enjoyment

emmak from , 28th November, 2009

Probably not the mot accurate period drama (!) ever made, but very enjoyable none the less. Plenty of bright colours (you can see the 'bollywood' influence many times), good characters and a fun, interesting story. A couple of hours of pure escapism. A good movie!

Read all recent reviews