Madame Bovary (1949) Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

MGM circumvented the censorship that would otherwise have prevented a film version of Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary by adding a prologue and epilogue that assured any and all bluenoses that the story was strictly a work of fiction. James Mason appears as Flaubert, defending his inflammatory novel before a French jury. Thus, the tragedy of Emma Bovary (Jennifer Jones) is offered as a product of Flaubert's imagination, rather than a real-life story. The body of the film concerns Emma's attempt to escape the boredom of her bourgeois existence by marrying a wealthy doctor (Van Heflin). She finds life with the physician even more tiresome than her previous experiences, thus begins taking a series of wealthy lovers-all of whom prove to be two-dimensional cads. Unable to tolerate a lifetime of dead-end affairs, Emma eventually commits suicide. The best sequence-indeed, one of the finest set pieces ever directed by Vincente Minnelli-is the "Emma Bovary Waltz" sequence, a dazzling experience in dizzying camera movements. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

DVD Release Date:
03/06/2007
Run Time:
115 min.
Production Co.:
Franco London Films, MGM, Pandro S. Berman
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
Infidelity, Self-Destructive Romance, Social Climbing, Suicide
Tone:
Lavish, Literate, Stylized, Sweeping, Tearjerking
Keywords:
bourgeois, jury, lover, marriage-problems, woman, writer
Time Period:
19th century
Status:
DVD