![: Ladies In Lavender [2004]](http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00075142Q.02._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
Amazon.co.uk Review:
Ladies in Lavender is exactly the sort of film
that prompts people to question, "Why dont
they make films like this anymore?" Its a
delicately-paced story of two aging sisters--Ursula (Dame
Judi Dench) and Janet (Maggie Smith--who live together on
a Cornwall beach in 1936. They discover a foreign
stranger washed ashore (Daniel Bruhl), and while nursing
him back to health make an astonishing discovery: the
young man, a Pole, is a phenomenally gifted violinist.
And Ursula finds her feelings for the man go far deeper
than merely maternal.
Writer and director Charles Dance has crafted an
admirable debut. Ladies in Lavender a tenderly
done and bittersweet story of innocence and regret.
Though the dialogue sometimes seems too earnest, and he
has an over-reliance on slow motion cinematography, he
still allows his two talented leads enough time and space
to shine. Its only unfortunate that more effort did
not go into the DVD release of the film: the extras only
consist of soundbites from the cast and crew, which add
little insight. --Ted Kord
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