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The End of the Affair

United States, United Kingdom

1999

102 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Neil Jordan

PROD Neil Jordan, Stephen Woolley

SCR Neil Jordan

DP Roger Pratt

CAST Ralph Fiennes, Stephen Rea, Julianne Moore, Heather-Jay Jones, James Bolam, Ian Hart, Jason Isaacs

ED Tony Lawson

PROD DES Anthony Pratt

MUSIC Michael Nyman

SOUND Mark Auguste

Director

Original

Neil Jordan

One of Ireland’s most celebrated directors, Neil Jordan has made his name directing moody, often politically charged films that focus largely on themes of love, betrayal, and the darker realms of the human psyche. Born February 25, 1950, in Sligo County, Ireland, Jordan began his career as an acclaimed fiction writer. He entered the film industry in 1981 as a script consultant on John Boorman’s Excalibur, and subsequently made a documentary about the making of the film. After scripting another film, Traveller, Jordan wrote and directed his first film, the stylish 1982 crime drama Angel. Starring Stephen Rea as a saxophone player who witnesses a series of brutal murders, it explored the darker, violent impulses of the human mind, a theme that Jordan would revisit time and again in his later films. After attracting his first wave of international recognition for In the Company of Wolves (1984), his horror-tinged retelling of the Little Red Riding Hood tale, Jordan had his first real success… read more

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Picture of Rman

Rman

3Feb13

It`s a good film but I really expected more than this concerning the Greene`s great novel. Although decent directing, It`s a poor adaptation. After reading Graham Greene`s masterpiece watching the movie was a bit disappointing.

Picture of Beatrice

Beatrice

11May12

" You see I never stopped loving you, even though I couldn't see you. "

m. noone likes this

Picture of laura de noves

laura de noves

16Mar11

the alchemical power of love transforming the corporeal into a higher love, a divine love. human frailty is not only acknowledged, but appreciated without being indulgent. nobility of spirit.

m. noone likes this

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A look at the recent and historical uses of Big Ben in movie posters.

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