The Light Between Oceans

  • New Zealand The Light Between Oceans (more)
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Lighthouse keeper Tom Sherbourne (Michael Fassbender) and spirited Isabel (Alicia Vikander) live together in married bliss on a remote, rugged island off the coast of Australia. But their windswept world is turned upside down when Isabel learns that she's unable to bear a child. One day, a drifting lifeboat washes ashore with a crying baby in it. The dilemma the couple now faces echoes far beyond the island, engulfing and irrevocably impacting their world. (Showtime)

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Trailer 1

Reviews (6)

DaViD´82 

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English I have a somewhat ambivalent feeling about it. On the one hand, it's admirably slow, when you really feel all those past years (it definitely looks much longer than it really is, but in a good way), on the other hand, it only takes those key moments from the original without the padding around that it acts as an outline of melodramatic bitter clichés full of Sophia's choices to be used in a Mexican soap opera, so you simply won´t stop laughing. Not to mention the ending that looks like from another movie/genre. Why it works so well in the end is how it´s directed, the genius loci of the dreary locations (who else than their master Arkapaw) and, above all, emotionally tense melodrama subdued by performances. ()

kaylin 

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English A film I wasn't expecting much from and was hoping to just be pleasantly surprised by, mainly because it brought together a very pleasant central pairing of Fassbender and Vikander. I wanted to see these two together. It was interesting. They didn't disappoint, and neither did the story, it just turned out that sometimes justice and what we consider it to be are quite peculiar. ()

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Necrotongue 

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English The premise wasn't bad at all, the acting was decent, but the running time was awfully long. I understand that when you’re a lighthouse keeper, the days do get long, but the film didn't need to be so literal about it. It's possible that I was influenced by the fact that I'd seen another film before this one with a running time of 137 minutes, but I still think a cut would be in order. ()

Kaka 

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English Exactly what you expect if you know the work of Derek Cianfrance, the master of relationship dramas: a touching, poignant and hauntingly minimalist period piece. The social and moral dilemmas set 100 years in the past give the film a certain refinement and grace of yesteryear that is hard to do in modern films and usually needs to mature a bit. It is expectedly heartbreaking in places and scripted very well; it gets under the skin. You understand everyone involved, and yet you cannot say unequivocally what is good and what is not. After Minghella, those classically told, old-school stories have almost run their course, and it's great that Cianfrance is picking up the baton and moving on. With his directorial virtuosity and sense of emotion, we have much to look forward to in the future. Cut 10 or 15 minutes of overloaded shots of the sea and rocks and it could have been almost perfect. And I hope Vikander gets another Oscar for this. ()

angel74 

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English A slow-paced romance, where you know right from the start that nothing will be as rosy as it first seemed. Fortunately, there are so many fateful twists and turns that it's not easy to predict how the story will unfold. I completely drifted away while watching the loving relationship between Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender at the lonely and windswept lighthouse. Then I willingly let myself be moved by the heartbreaking drama full of obstacles they had to overcome on their life journey together. (80%) ()

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