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The Sun Also Rises (1957)

The Sun Also Rises (1957)
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For its time, The Sun Also Rises was a reasonably frank and faithful adaptation of the 1926 Ernest Hemingway novel. Its main concession to Hollywood formula was the casting of star players who were all too old to convincingly portray Hemingway's "Lost Generation" protagonists. Tyrone Power heads the cast as American news correspondent Jake Barnes, who, after incurring a injury in WW I that has rendered him impotent, relocates to Paris to escape his troubles. Barnes links up with several other lost souls, including the nymphomaniacal Lady Brett Ashley (Ava Gardner), irresponsible drunkard Mike Campbell (Errol Flynn) and perennial hangers-on Robert Cohn (Mel Ferrer) and Bill Gorton (Eddie Albert). In their never-ending search for new thrills, Barnes and his cohorts trundle off to Spain, where they participate in the annual Pamplona bull run and act as unofficial "sponsors" of handsome young matador Pedro Romero (played by future film executive Robert Evans). Additionally, Lady Brett pursues a romance with Jake, despite her engagement to the dissolute Campbell. Filmed on location in Pamplona, Paris, Biarritz and Mexico, The Sun Also Rises was budgeted at $5 million; like many "big" pictures of the era, it tended to be hollow and draggy at times. The film's best performance is delivered by Errol Flynn, though it can be argued that, in taking on the role of the hedonistic, hard-drinking, burned-out Mike Campbell, he was merely playing himself. A vastly inferior version of The Sun Also Rises was produced for television in 1984. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Tyrone PowerAva Gardner, (more)
Director(s):
Henry King
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Sun Also Rises

For its time, The Sun Also Rises was a reasonably frank and faithful adaptation of the 1926 Ernest Hemingway novel. Its main concession to Hollywood formula was the casting of star players who were all too old to convincingly portray Hemingway's "Lost Generation" protagonists. Tyrone Power heads the cast as American news correspondent Jake Barnes, who, after incurring a injury in WW I that has rendered him impotent, relocates to Paris to escape his troubles. Barnes links up with several other lost souls, including the nymphomaniacal Lady Brett Ashley (Ava Gardner), irresponsible drunkard Mike Campbell (Errol Flynn) and perennial hangers-on Robert Cohn (Mel Ferrer) and Bill Gorton (Eddie Albert). In their never-ending search for new thrills, Barnes and his cohorts trundle off to Spain, where they participate in the annual Pamplona bull run and act as unofficial "sponsors" of handsome young matador Pedro Romero (played by future film executive Robert Evans). Additionally, Lady Brett pursues a romance with Jake, despite her engagement to the dissolute Campbell. Filmed on location in Pamplona, Paris, Biarritz and Mexico, The Sun Also Rises was budgeted at $5 million; like many "big" pictures of the era, it tended to be hollow and draggy at times. The film's best performance is delivered by Errol Flynn, though it can be argued that, in taking on the role of the hedonistic, hard-drinking, burned-out Mike Campbell, he was merely playing himself. A vastly inferior version of The Sun Also Rises was produced for television in 1984. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
130 mins

Complete Cast of The Sun Also Rises


Director(s):
Henry King
Writer(s):
Peter ViertelErnest Hemingway
Producer(s):
Darryl F. Zanuck
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    Joshua M.

    A pointless waste of time which will leave you wondering why it was ever made. Please don't watch this movie and think that the novel The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway is anything like it. Yes, there are the same character names and settings but the script writer and director of this film completely miss the point of the novel, ignore the symbolism employed by Hemingway and turn the characters, so interesting in the novel, into vapid drunks. The beginning of the film with 1950's Paris which then fades away in `20's Paris has nothing at all to do even with the tale the film tries to tell. The acting is horrible except for Errol Flynn. Even Ava Gardner couldn't save this wreck. Avoid at all costs and go read the book. The book is excellent and will reward your time.

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    Megan E.

    Pointless is the perfect word to describe this movie. While I understand that Hemingway was trying to convey the hopelessness of the Lost Generation, this movie goes beyond that. The acting was forced, especially by Tyrone Power. And the plot devolved into lots of drinking and posturing. Not worth watching.

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    Laurie and Joe P.

    I viewed this because I've always been a Tyrone Power fan and had written on this for a college literature paper. While Ava Gardner is a treat to watch too, she portrays a spoiled brat who wants her cake and eat it too and acts out when she doesn't get it. It's a hard role to view as a modern woman. Between that and the silent suffering of the lead (Power), it's a negative romp of debauchery and unfulfilled expectations. While closely resembling Hemingway's book, one wonders why he wrote it, as surely he must have been quite depressed and unfulfilled himself.

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