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Bright Star Poster

Bright Star

First love burns brightest.
2009 | 119m | English

(29421 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

In 1818, high-spirited young Fanny Brawne finds herself increasingly intrigued by the handsome but aloof poet John Keats, who lives next door to her family friends the Dilkes. After reading a book of his poetry, she finds herself even more drawn to the taciturn Keats. Although he agrees to teach her about poetry, Keats cannot act on his reciprocated feelings for Fanny, since as a struggling poet he has no money to support a wife.
Release Date: Sep 18, 2009
Director: Jane Campion
Writer: Jane Campion, Andrew Motion
Genres: Drama, Romance
Keywords london, england, poet, duringcreditsstinger, woman director, 19th century
Production Companies BBC Film, Australian Film Finance Corporation, UK Film Council, Screen Australia, Pathé, Hopscotch Productions, Jan Chapman Films
Box Office Revenue: $14,374,652
Budget: $10,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Abbie Cornish Fanny Brawne
Ben Whishaw John Keats
Paul Schneider Mr. Brown
Kerry Fox Mrs. Brawne
Edie Martin Toots
Thomas Brodie-Sangster Samuel
Claudie Blakley Maria Dilke
Gerard Monaco Charles Dilke
Antonia Campbell-Hughes Abigail
Samuel Roukin Reynolds
Amanda Hale Reynolds sister
Lucinda Raikes Reynolds sister
Samuel Barnett Mr. Severn
Jonathan Aris Mr. Hunt
Olly Alexander Tom Keats
Roger Ashton-Griffiths shopkeeper
Eileen Davies Mrs. Bentley
Sebastian Armesto Mr. Haslam
Adrian Schiller Mr. Taylor
Theresa Watson Charlotte
Vincent Franklin Dr. Bree
Name Job
Janet Patterson Production Design, Costume Design
Glenn Marks Stunt Coordinator
Emma Mager Line Producer
Alexandre de Franceschi Editor
Charlotte Dirickx Set Decoration
Christian Huband Art Direction
David Hindle Supervising Art Director
John Dennison Sound Supervisor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Steve Dunn Visual Effects Producer
Michael Elliott First Assistant Director
Fulvia Bartoli Makeup Artist
Konnie Daniel Hair Designer
Jane Logan Makeup & Hair
Laura Schiavo Makeup Artist
Anita Anderson Hairstylist
Leon Anderson Foley Editor
Angelo Bonanni Sound Recordist
Helen Brown Foley Artist
Peter Gleaves ADR Mixer
Paul Huntingford Foley Artist
Dan Johnston Foley Artist
Duncan McAllister Foley Recordist
Sean O'Reilly Sound Effects Editor
Tony Vaccher Dialogue Editor
Stefano Maria Ortolani Art Direction
Jane Campion Writer, Director
Greig Fraser Director of Photography
Nina Gold Casting
Chris Navarro ADR Mixer
Robert Sterne Casting Associate
Mark Bradshaw Original Music Composer
Andrew Motion Story
Guglielmo Lepri Hairstylist
Name Title
Jan Chapman Producer
Caroline Hewitt Producer
Cameron McCracken Executive Producer
François Ivernel Executive Producer
Christine Langan Executive Producer
David M. Thompson Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Actress Abbie Cornish Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 19 31 11
2024 5 24 51 14
2024 6 18 27 12
2024 7 18 31 9
2024 8 13 18 7
2024 9 9 14 6
2024 10 15 26 7
2024 11 14 35 7
2024 12 10 18 5
2025 1 13 27 8
2025 2 9 16 3
2025 3 4 10 1
2025 4 2 5 1
2025 5 2 5 1
2025 6 1 3 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 1 1
2025 9 5 13 1
2025 10 7 10 4

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Reviews

tanty
6.0

Good performances from Cornish, Whishaw and Schneider for a folks and costums movie. You will enjoy it if you like the genre. If not ... well, probably it would be a slow and dull romantic drama for you. ...

Jun 23, 2021
tmdb28039023
4.0

Bright Star is the rare biopic of an artist that actually provides some insight into its subject’s craft. Usually, a film about a writer, including such recent examples as To Olivia (Roald Dahl) and The Laureate (Robert Graves), will approach the creative process as 99-percent inspiration and 1-perc ... ent actual work – and sometimes not even that. Writing is taken as matter of course; poems come out straight out of the author’s mouth, fully formed like Athena emerging from Zeus’s forehead. Bright Star doesn’t dismiss the notion of divine inspiration, but it does not tacitly take it for granted either; on the contrary, it acknowledges and articulates it (“If poetry does not come as naturally as leaves to a tree, then it had better not come at all”). Moreover, even though it declares “Poetic craft is a carcass, a sham,” it does so perhaps out of modesty (after all, “A poet is not at all poetical. He is the most un-poetical thing in existence. He has no identity”), before diving right into the crux of the craft itself (“A poem needs understanding through the senses. The point of diving in a lake is not immediately to swim to the shore but to be in the lake, to luxuriate in the sensation of water. You do not work the lake out. It is an experience beyond thought. Poetry soothes and emboldens the soul to accept mystery”). This is all great stuff, and writer/director Jane Campion displays a sincere love for poetry with which she infuses her characters (who not only commit their favorite poems to memory, but can even recite verbatim from literary reviews). The problem is that her cast themselves are un-poetical and have no identity, and while this might serve them well in their poetic endeavors, as characters it renders them dull and unappealing; Ben Wishaw is wishy-washy as John Keats, and although credit is due Campion for not depicting him as a proto-rockstar (unlike, for instance, Leo DiCaprio’s Rimbaud in Total Eclipse), she loses many points for portraying Keats’s romantic interest Fanny Brawne (Abbie Cornish) as a proto-groupie (early on, in order to impress him, she quotes some of Keats’s verses back to him, as if he weren’t familiar enough with his own work). I’m aware that an artist’s love life, or lack thereof, tends to inform his creative output, but the romance between Wishaw and Cornish is so corny and mushy that we can’t believe such saccharine sentiment could ever translate into Keats’s sublime lyricism. Only Paul Schneider as the sardonic Charles Armitage Brown, Keats’s fellow poet, comes across as a sensible person who can tell the difference between poetry and real life; he starts out as boorish for the sake of boorishness, but he grows on us the more we realize that his contempt for the shallow Fanny is well-deserved (I especially enjoyed when he tricks her with a question about Paradise Lost’s non-existent rhymes).

Sep 03, 2022