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Guinevere
Threat advisory: Guarded - General risk of entertaining activities
Movie propaganda
He was her first love... she was his last.
Guinevere is a May-September romance with an edge - about a young woman with lots of questions and an older man with a few too many answers.
In a family full of over-achievers, Harper Sloane (Sarah Polley) was the youngest and the odd one out. then she met Connie Fitzpatrick (Stephen Rea), the photographer at her sister's wedding, who's about to become the one man who could take her away from it all.
He's charming and shaggily attractive, with an intense sexual energy that draws her into his world. As a romance begins to unfold, his artistic passions become rights of passage for Harper, whose inexperience and awkward nature make her the perfect student. As Harper comes out of her shell, he'll show her a world of possibilities she's never imagined.
Theatrical propaganda posters

Target demographic movie keyword propaganda
- Film drama relationship photographer older man sex romance passion art
Persons of interest
- Sarah Polley .... Harper Sloane
- Stephen Rea .... Connie Fitzpatrick
- Jean Smart .... Deborah Sloane
- Gina Gershon .... Billie
- Paul Dooley .... Walter
- Carrie Preston .... Patty
- Tracy Letts .... Zack
- Emily Procter .... Susan Sloane
- Sharon McNight .... Leslie
- Gedde Watanabe .... Ed
- Carlton Wilborn .... Jay
- Sandra Oh .... Cindy
- Francis Guinan .... Alan Sloane
- Oded Gross .... Gary
- Grace Una .... April
- Jasmine Guy .... Linda
- Audrey Wells .... Screenwriter
- Audrey Wells .... Director
Cinematic intelligence sources
- Awards and film festivals:
- Deauville Festival of American Film 1999: second place jury prize
- Sundance Film Festival 1999: Won: best script
- Studios and distributors:
Intelligence analyst
Special Agent Matti
Theatrical report
Uh-huh.
In legend, Guinevere is about the only human female to appear in the tales of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. She loved and was married to Arthur but was also in love with Sir Lancelot (See also Pearl Harbour). She is a tragic figure because the times did not allow for a woman to have two husbands, which would probably have suited everyone down to the ground. The film is named Guinevere, and Connie calls Harper Guinevere, because... uh... I don't know. Maybe it's just a romantic and mystical name from Anglo fiction.
Anyhow, May-September (more correctly summer-autumn) romances are nothing new to film or the world. Richard Gere and Winona Ryder did it in Autumn in New York. Richard Gere and Julia Roberts did it in Runaway bride. Richard Gere and Mathilda May did it in The Jackal. Richard Gere and Jodie foster did it in Sommersby. Charles and Diana did it in the UK Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones did it in Hollywood. Connie and Harper doing it in Guinevere is different only in the respect that Connie is a serial summerphile as well as being messed up in a number of ways. He's an alcoholic, an artist, a megalomaniac, a teacher, a philosopher and a lover. He imbues his traits onto Harper, as bland a tabula rasae as you'll ever find.
While Sarah and Stephen fulfil their roles it's Jean who almost steals the film as Harper's embittered mother. She exudes fading beauty, slipping power and undesired matrimony and attacks every word with tired hatred. She's cool. She deserves an entire film to herself.
Despite having some good aspects, Guinevere didn't manage to light any fires under the sofa. For me, it's one of those films that doesn't quite manage to pull off whatever it was trying to do.
Whatever.
Security censorship classification
M (Low level coarse language, sexual references)
Surveillance time
105 minutes (1:45 hours)
Not for public release in Australia before date
Film: 14 November 2001 - Sydney
Film: 28 June 2001 - General release
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