Women in Love
- R
- Year:
- 1969
- 131 min
- 499 Views
We're going to see that wedding.
But you haven't been home five minutes.
You don't have a wedding every day,
do you?
Now, look, Gudrun.
Your Aunt Jessie's coming to lunch
and you haven't seen her for two years.
Now why don't you stay?
Two more days won't make much
difference, now, will it? Come on.
It's a Crich wedding, Mum.
- Ursula...
- Mm...
Do you really not want to get married?
I don't know.
- Depends how you mean.
Wouldn't you be in a better position,
if you were married?
I might be. I'm not sure, really.
You don't think one needs
the experience of having been married?
Oh, Gudrun, do you really think
it need be an experience?
It's bound to be. Possibly undesirable,
but it is bound to be an experience
of some sort.
Not really.
More likely to be the end of experience.
- Morning, Miss Brangwen.
- Morning.
Yes, of course, there is that to consider.
Hurry, Tibby, for God's sake.
We really are late.
Here. Got it?
Gerald's going to blame me for this,
you know.
- Where's Birkin?
- With the groom. He's late.
Whoa, there! Steady!
- Hello, Gerald.
- Winifred.
- Hello, Hermione.
- Mother.
Good morning, Christiana.
It's such bad form for the groom
to be late. Gerald'll be furious.
Oh, don't worry about that. Something
unconventional will do that family good.
Laura's not going to run away,
you know. If you're late, you're late.
Whoa! Whoa! Whoa!
Father.
Hallo, Laura.
Tibby!
What a spectacle.
Does it hurt your sense of family pride?
Yes, it does, rather. Do something
properly or don't bother to do it at all.
But it's a masterpiece of good form.
It's the hardest thing in the world,
to act spontaneously,
on one's impulses,
and it's the only gentlemanly thing to do.
Provided you're fit enough to do it.
- Do you expect me to take you seriously?
- Yes, Gerald.
You're one of the very few people
I do expect that of.
- Hello, Hermione.
- What made you late?
the immortality of the soul.
And he hadn't got a buttonhook.
"Immortality of the soul"?
More appropriate for an execution,
I should've thought,
than for a wedding.
Perhaps it would be nice,
if a man came along.
I mean, I wouldn't go out of my way
to look for him,
but if there should happen along
a highly attractive individual,
with sufficient means...well...
Oh, don't you find yourself
getting bored with everything?
Everything fails to materialise.
Nothing materialises.
Everything withers in the bud.
Everything.
Frightening.
Do you hope to get anywhere,
by just marrying?
Hm...well...
It seems the inevitable next step.
'But you see...it's just impossible.
'The man makes it impossible.'
'Now, sometimes,
catkins are called lamb's-tails.'
Don't you think they look rather like them?
So lovely and tiny.
Soft...
Sorry, did I startle you?
I thought you'd heard me come in.
No...
You're doing catkins!
Are they as far out as this already?
I hadn't noticed them this year.
'It's the fact you want to
emphasise, not the impression.'
And what's the fact?
of the female flower...
dangling yellow male catkin...
yellow pollen flying from one to the other.
'Make a pictorial record of the fact.
'As you do when you're drawing a face.'
Two eyes, nose, mouth with teeth...
I've been waiting for you for so long...
I thought I'd come and see
when he's on duty.
How do you do, Miss Brangwen?
Do you mind my coming in?
No.
Are you sure?
What are you doing?
- Catkins.
- Really?
Well, from these little red bits,
the nuts come.
If they receive pollen
from these...long danglers.
Little red flames.
Little red flames.
Aren't they beautiful?
I think they're so beautiful.
- Did you never notice them before?
- No. Never before.
Well, now you'll always see them.
Thank you...so much,
for showing me.
I think they're so beautiful.
Little red flames.
Ooh, he's dropped his hat!
Fancy her barging into your classroom
like that. What a liberty.
Oh, Hermione loves to dominate everyone.
- She'd like to dominate us, I think.
- Hm.
Oh, so that's why
she's invited us for the weekend.
Charming.
Hallo!
It's Gerald Crich!
I know.
So,
Gerald's in charge of the mines now.
Mm...
Making all kinds of latest improvements.
They hate him for it. He takes them
all by the scruff of the neck
He'll have to die soon, when he's made
all the possible improvements
and there's nothing more to improve.
- He's got go, anyhow.
- Oh, certainly, he's got go.
The unfortunate thing is,
where does his go go to?
Dreadful. Dreadful.
All this drive and dissension.
If we could only realise that,
in the spirit, we're all one.
All equal, in the spirit.
All brothers, there.
The rest wouldn't matter.
There'd be no more of this carping...
...envy...
and all this struggle for power.
Which destroys. Only destroys.
It's just the opposite, Hermione.
It's just the contrary.
The minute you begin to compare,
one man is seen to be far better
than another...
All the inequality in the world,
that you can imagine, is there by nature.
Well, I want every man to have
his fair share of the world's goods.
So that I can be rid of his importunity.
So that I can say to him,
"Now you've got what you want. You've
got your fair share of the world's gear.
"Now, you mind yourself
and don't obstruct me!"
It sounds like megalomania, Rupert.
I must go and dress for lunch.
Don't be late, Rupert.
Oh.
So this is Hermione's country cottage.
Well, there's one reason
Rupert's attracted to her.
Oh. Do you think so?
I don't think that.
Lovers have sold their souls
for far less, my dear.
At least here you will have
an opportunity to observe nature.
Gudrun Brangwen.
Gerald Crich.
Tibby and Laura Lupton.
Ursula Brangwen.
Rupert Birkin.
Rupert Birkin.
Peculiar names we all have.
Do you think we've all been singled out?
Chosen for some
extraordinary moment in life.
Or are we all cursed
with the mark of Cain?
I'm afraid Ursula was a martyred saint.
It's always been
rather difficult to live up to.
And who is Gudrun?
In a Norse myth, Gudrun was a sinner
who murdered her husband.
Will you live up to that?
Which would you prefer me to live up to,
Mr Crich? The sinner or the murderer?
Ah,
I see the perpetual struggle has begun.
Oh, we all struggle so, don't we?
The proper way to eat a fig,
in society,
is to split it in four,
holding it by the stump,
and open it,
so that it is a...glittering, rosy,
moist, honeyed, heavy-petalled,
four-petalled flower.
Then you throw away the skin,
after you have taken off the blossom
with your lips.
But the vulgar way...
is just to put your mouth to the crack
and take out the flesh in one bite.
The fig is a very secretive fruit.
it stands for the female part,
the fig fruit.
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"Women in Love" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 18 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/women_in_love_23629>.
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