Letters to Juliet
Introductions
Directed by Gary Winick
Produced
by
·
Caroline
Kaplan
·
Ellen Barkin
·
Mark Canton
Written
by
·
José Rivera
·
Tim Sullivan
Starring
:
·
Amanda
Seyfried
·
Christopher
Egan
·
Vanessa
Redgrave
·
Gael García Bernal
·
Franco Nero
Music
by Andrea Guerra
Cinematography
: Marco
Pontecorvo
Editing
by Bill Pankow
Distributed
by Summit Entertainment
Release
dates May 14, 2010
Running
time : 105
minutes
Country
: United States, Italy
Language
: English, Italian
Characters
- Amanda Seyfried as Sophie Hall, a fact checker living in New York.
- Christopher Egan as Charlie Wyman, Claire's grandson, who has troubles coming to terms with his grandmother loving anyone other than his late grandfather.
- Vanessa Redgrave as Claire Smith-Wyman, the girl who wrote the letter to Juliet 50 years ago, and is hoping to find her Lorenzo.
- Franco Nero as Lorenzo Bartolini, Claire's love interest.
- Gael García Bernal as Victor, Sophie's chef fiancé who is easily preoccupied with anything having to do with food, cooking, and the opening of his restaurant.
- Luisa Ranieri as Isabella, the most important of the four original Juliet's secretaries in the film and a friend of Sophie's.
- Marina Massironi as Francesca, one of Juliet's secretaries.
- Lidia Biondi as Donatella, one of Juliet's secretaries.
- Milena Vukotic as Maria, one of Juliet's secretaries.
- Oliver Platt as Bobby, the editor of The New Yorker who wants Sophie to remain a fact-checker.
- Daniel Baldock as Lorenzo Jr., the older of Lorenzo's sons.
- Stefano Guerrini as Lorenzo III, grandson of Lorenzo.
- Ashley Lilley as Patricia, Charlie's cousin
- Luisa De Santis as Angelina, Isabella's mother.
Synopsis
Sophie Hall is a young American
woman who works for The New Yorker as a fact checker.
She asks her boss, if, while she is in Italy on a pre-honeymoon with her fiancé,
Victor, if she could write while she is away, and potentially have something
published in the magazine. Her boss shoots her down, telling her that she is
already so good at her job and that he needs fact checkers like her, and she
leaves work disappointed.
She goes on her pre-honeymoon
with her chef fiancé Victor, to Verona, Italy.
Victor is unmoved by the romance of Italy and uses his time to research his
soon-to-open restaurant, often neglecting Sophie, much to her consternation.
Sophie accidentally discovers an unanswered "letter to Juliet" by an
English woman named Claire Smith from 1957, one of thousands of missives left
at the fictional lover's Verona courtyard that are typically answered by the
"secretaries of Juliet". She answers it and within a week the now
elderly Claire arrives in Verona with her handsome yet priggish barrister
grandson Charlie. Claire
and Sophie take an instant liking to each other, but Charlie and Sophie do not
get along at first, for he feels as if Sophie is intruding on their lives and
that his grandmother's soul-mate was his grandfather, and not her
long-lost-lover.
On the morning in
their last day of searching for Lorenzo. Sophie is shocked when Claire tells
her to sit in the front with Charlie, and Claire does all the talking on the
drive, while Sophie and Charlie maintain an awkward silence with one another.
On a whim, Claire points out a vineyard to Charlie and asks if he could stop so
they can have a farewell drink for Sophie, as the wine was hers and Lorenzo's
favorite. As Charlie drives down the road, Claire sees a young man who looks
exactly like her Lorenzo, and commands Charlie to stop the car.
Parts of
Paragraph
Introduction : Sophie
accidentally discovers an unanswered "letter to Juliet" by an English
woman named Claire Smith from 1957.
Climax : at that moment, Lorenzo comes riding in dramatically
on his horse, Claire walks towards him, and they both say that it has been many
years.
Resolution : Charlie comes out to find Sophie, who by this time is standing in
one of the balconies of Lorenzo's home, and ultimately admits she loves him but
tells him to go back to Patricia, and then, Charlie tells Sophie that the woman
is his cousin Patricia and Sophie wonders how such a thing can be legal.
Language Expressions
|
Language Expressions
|
Meaning
|
|
|
I’m sorry, god i’m sorry
|
Sophie sad to hear Charlie’s
story that he broke up with Patricia
|
|
|
It’s really, really, really good
|
Charlie read Sophie’s writing and
said that Sophie’s writing is really good, and Sophie is a good writer
|
|
|
Yeah, i think so
|
Express that Charlie believe in a
destiny
|
|
|
I’m sincerely sorry, Sophie
|
Charlie admit his mistake and say
sorry to Sophie
|
|
|
It won’t happen again
|
Charlie promised Sophie that he’ll
never make a mistake anymore
|
|
|
I’m so happy for you
|
Sophie really happy, because at
the end Claire meet Lorenzo
|
|
|
Thank you
|
Claire said thank yo to Sophie ,
because she helps her to find Lorenzo
|
|
|
Oh my god
|
Sophie’s boss amazed by Sophie’s
writing
|
|
|
I love you
|
Sophie said that she loves
Charlie
|
|
|
I’m madly, deeply, truly,
passionately in love with you
|
Charlie replay Sophie’s love
|
|
Moral Value
This movie teach us to never give up
with our life, do the best as you can, eventhough yo think that it is too late.
There’s nothing late in this world if you tried it. Sophie trusts in her
abilities as a journalist, writes and submits her story, even though there was
a risk it wouldn't get published. The
messages center around distinguishing true everlasting love, which the movie
claims will never die. There's a sweet, but not altogether
reasonable message that first love never dies, no matter how many years have
passed.
Comments
This is a good movie. From this
movie we can learn to never give up to face this world. We can learn to never
give up to find our true love, and we are never late to find it. This movie isn’t
good for kids, because there are sex acts. It’s not good to watch by kids. This
movie use two languages, English and Italy. I can’t understand what the
character said when they speak in Italy. Actually, this is a good movie and we
can apply it in our life to never give up to find what we want.
Sources
I watched this movie when i was in
Senior High School at the second year, my teacher recommended me to watch this
wonderful movie. In that time, i wasn’t finish yet to watch this movie. So i
downloaded this movie from youtube and i watched it again. I watch this movie
at the second time by myself at Sunday 30, 2014.
U've done well nis (y)
BalasHapusBut i think you need to pay attention of the grammar, there are some words who have uncorrect spelling .
very good! you need to pay attention on using of punctuation.
BalasHapusgood job nisa. you write the synopsis clearly!
BalasHapus