1.27 mi | ASHBURN 20147
Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
The Bridges of Madison County (Full Screen Edition)
Learn more
Return this item for free
We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Return this item for free
We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
DVD
June 1, 2010 "Please retry" | Deluxe Edition | 1 | $2.99 | $2.76 |
DVD
May 6, 2008 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $14.99 | $4.99 |
DVD
June 12, 2006 "Please retry" | — | 1 |
—
| — | — |
Watch Instantly with ![]() | Rent | Buy |
Purchase options and add-ons
Format | Multiple Formats, Full Screen, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Surround Sound, NTSC, Color |
Contributor | Meryl Streep, Clint Eastwood |
Language | English, French |
Runtime | 2 hours and 15 minutes |
UPC | 085391377221 |
Frequently bought together
![The Bridges of Madison County (Full Screen Edition)](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61CuxyPhcqL._AC_UL116_SR116,116_.jpg)
Customers who bought this item also bought
- Out of AfricaRobert RedfordDVDFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 16
- The Bridges of Madison CountyHardcoverFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 16
- Fried Green TomatoesKathy BatesDVDFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 16
- The Thorn BirdsDaryl DukeDVDFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 16
- The Notebook (2004)Toby EmmerichDVDFREE Shipping on orders over $35 shipped by AmazonGet it as soon as Friday, Aug 16
Product Description
Product Description
World-traveling National Geographic photographer Robert Kincaid and Iowa housewife Francesca Johnson aren't looking to turn their lives upside down. Each is at a point in life where expectations are behind them. Yet four days after meeting, they won't want to lose the love they've found.
Academy Award winners Meryl Streep (earning her 10th Oscar nomination for this performance) and Clint Eastwood (who also produces and directs) bring blazing starpower and powerful conviction to the beloved characters of Robert James Waller's rhapsodic best-seller of love, choice and consequences. "Streep and Eastwood are so visually and spiritually right they seem to have walked right off the page," Entertainment Weekly proclaims. Also right are the small details and large emotions of once-in-a-lifetime love. With luck, a love like that happens to some of us sooner or later. For Robert and Francesca, it was later. And it was glorious.
Amazon.com
Some called it a snooze-fest, while others tearfully clutched their Kleenex. In any case, Clint Eastwood was an unusual and (as it turned out) perceptive choice to direct and costar in this lush adaptation of Robert James Waller's phenomenally bestselling novel. Meryl Streep costars as Francesca, the lonely Iowa farmer's wife who is instantly attracted to Robert (Eastwood), the photographer from National Geographic who is in the area to photograph the bridges along Iowa's rural roadways. The two fall in love while Francesca's husband and children are away at a county fair, but the story's passion and lasting appeal derive from their decision to part forever after just a few brief days of intimate connection. Superbly acted with an emphasis on quiet, graceful moments of tender revelation, the film builds to a crescendo of powerful and conflicting emotions. Like David Lean's Brief Encounter (to which it bears marked similarities), The Bridges of Madison County is destined to become one of the classic movie love stories. --Jeff Shannon
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
- Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.38 x 0.6 inches; 2.4 ounces
- Director : Clint Eastwood
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Full Screen, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Surround Sound, NTSC, Color
- Run time : 2 hours and 15 minutes
- Release date : January 1, 1995
- Actors : Clint Eastwood, Meryl Streep
- Subtitles: : English, French, Spanish
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround)
- Studio : Warner Home Video
- ASIN : 0790729369
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #56,301 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #2,313 in Romance (Movies & TV)
- #9,183 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviews with images
![My Favorite Movie Of All Time](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/G/01/x-locale/common/transparent-pixel._V192234675_.gif)
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Late summer 1965, and Francesca, an Iowa housewife in her mid-40s is seeing her husband and kids off to the Illinois State Fair. They'll be gone for 5 days and she'll have little to do but be bored in a different way than she usually is, until the arrival the next morning of a lost National Geographic photographer, Robert Kincaid (Clint Eastwood). Kincaid is on assignment to photograph the covered bridges that the county is famed for, and Francesca tries to tell him the way to the Roseman bridge but quickly decides to show him the way personally instead. As they drive towards the bridge and make small talk, they seem uneasy at first - but when Robert mentions Francesca's accent, and she finds that he has visited the town where she grew up in Italy, something starts to click. He reaches for a cigarette from the glove compartment and brushes her leg...later he picks flowers for her....they have the same favorite radio station, playing blues and jazz. Francesca starts to see something special, exotic....Robert sees someone warm and real, centered but more than the simple housewife that she's let herself become.
So begins four days of falling in love, four days of uncertainty, secretive glances, shyness turning to boldness, feelings long-buried in both reawakened and examined by two people smart enough to know right away how problematic an affair can be, yet willing to cast aside the doubts and damn the consequences. For now. The brilliance of The Bridges of Madison County isn't in any kind of originality, and it isn't in the bits of Waller's strained prose that occasionally leech through LaGravenese's generally excellent screenplay; it isn't in Streep's accent, which I know some have problems with but which I barely even notice at this point; and it isn't in the framing story, which again has grown on me over time but is certainly not all that interesting itself. What makes the film magical is the chemistry, the feeling of absolute rightness between the two leads, and the slow building towards an inevitable yet still heartbreaking decision.
Clint Eastwood certainly must have seemed an odd choice to take on this film, which he co-produced and co-wrote the elegiac "Doe Eyes" theme for in addition to directing and starring - even to me, a big fan already at the time, it seemed odd. Robert Redford seemed to be everybody's idea of Kincaid, and Steven Spielberg got mentioned often as a possible director, but I doubt many people will have problems after they see the film. Eastwood's Robert is a sensitive guy, but he's not schmaltzy, a poetic man but not pretentious about it, and a man clearly as unsure about the concept of love and the kind of risk he puts himself into as the married Francesca. He's a traveler and a loner, but deep down there's something missing, something we can feel almost from the beginning, something seen in the long gaze out the window near the end, and as he stands in the rain, waiting and hoping, at the film's emotional climax. And Eastwood the director keeps things from getting out of hand sentimentally until the last half hour, when both he and the audience know it's time for the tears to flow.
But as good as Clint is - and this is surely one of his two or three best performances - Meryl Streep is just a marvel here. Overlook the accent - whether you like it or not, it really isn't terribly important here - and you see a less mannered, more natural performance than she's given anywhere else. She mentions a couple of times in the making-of piece that accompanies the film on DVD that she was uncertain at first of Eastwood's quick shooting style, but it does wonders for her, giving a spontaneity that she really needed for the role. So much of the film relies on us believing that these are two hesitant, uncertain people with a yearning that at first has no direction - it can't seem studied, and it doesn't. And for a film that is set mostly in a kitchen and around barn-like red covered bridges, there's an excitement and intensity that can't be matched in most romances shot under the Eiffel Tower or in front of the Golden Gate Bridge. The technical aspects - Jack N. Green's lovely September-October photography and the wonderful Eastwood-chosen musical mixture of Johnny Hartman and Dinah Washington, among others - are just about perfect as well.
What the film ultimately builds to - and much of it is on Streep's shoulders - is a powerful examination of regret and loss and a determination that there are no perfect choices in life, only choices that involve different kinds of sacrifices. The film doesn't comment on the rightness or wrongness of her adultery, but Francesca lets her kids know that whatever she's done, she's not going to beat herself up over it - and neither should they. At the end, we know that whatever choice she made would have been difficult, would have involved hurting herself and others; there's no easy answer, only a bit of hope for the next generation, as they at least have come to accept and understand, and Francesca's ashes scatter on the wind....
NOTE ON THE DVD: The transfer on this 2008 "special edition" DVD is very nice and the aspect ratio correct - really essential to this tightly-shot film. Good if a little over-effusive commentary by cinematographer Jack Green and editor Joel Cox and a nice little making-of featurette.
Top reviews from other countries
![](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/default._CR0,0,1024,1024_SX48_.png)
gute Darsteller. Der Film ist absolut sehenswert. Story macht nachdenklich.
R
![](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/default._CR0,0,1024,1024_SX48_.png)
![](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/default._CR0,0,1024,1024_SX48_.png)
![](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/46becd9c-117b-4928-b309-ccc29a6845ed._CR83,0,333,333_SX48_.jpg)
Ces jours intenses de la passion, après lesquels il n’y a plus qu’à attendre la mort, Eastwood les situe en 1963 comme l’action d’Un Monde parfait. C’est l’année de l’assassinat de Kennedy et de l’intensification de l’engagement américain au Vietnam.
Probablement l’histoire d’amour la plus puissante jamais réalisée dans l’histoire du cinéma, tant elle possède la capacité d’émouvoir le plus grand nombre, tout en saisissant l’essence même du sentiment amoureux dans ce qu’il a de plus dévastateur. D’autant plus que le long métrage de Clint Eastwood, qui tient également un des deux rôles principaux, dresse en filigrane de cette romance impossible un immense portrait de femme, à la fois terriblement moderne et intimiste, d’une épouse au foyer tenant sa maisonnette aux côtés d’un mari certes affectueux, mais qui délaisse peu à peu sa vie conjugale et, de surcroît, la vie sociale et sexuelle de sa compagne. Il semble que la vie de Francesca soit devenu un pénitencier à ciel ouvert, comme si son esprit, tout ce qui faisait d’elle une femme unique avec de grandes aspirations, disparaissait de la réalité, comme si elle s’effaçait de son plein gré de ce simulacre informe qu’est le cocon familial, jusqu’à ce qu’il ne reste qu’un corps matériel n’ayant plus la capacité ni de s’exprimer, ni de se déplacer. Meryl Streep réitère une nouvelle fois sa démonstration de force filmique et trouve, dans le rôle extrêmement exigeant de Francesca Johnson. Un terrain d’expérimentation où elle peut traverser cette histoire, jouant sur une gamme exceptionnelle de sentiments contradictoires, avec une grâce et un charisme inégalables. A son image, on évoquera cette séquence, devenue mythique, de la station essence, où tombe une pluie torrentielle, exutoire psychologique inébranlable de nos deux protagonistes, qui se regardent une toute dernière fois, comme s’ils se connaissaient depuis toujours. Cet échange, d’une puissance évocatrice indicible, à l’orée du rêve fantasmatique.
Le cadre du film est superbe, Clint sublime les paysages, l'Iowa, les lieux qui sentent bon l'Amérique des années 50's, ou encore la nuit et les divers endroits qu'il va filmer (le bar, le pont ou l'intérieur de la maison). Cet aspect participe pleinement à l'atmosphère si atypique du film, naviguant entre charme, romantisme et mélancolie. Les deux comédiens principaux sont remarquables, et marquent le film par autant d'élégance que de spontanéité et de naturel, permettant de nous faire vivre cette histoire. Les instants de romantisme sont nombreux et toujours amenés naturellement. L'émotion qui en découle est forte, avec plusieurs séquences incroyables où l'on ne ressent que les sentiments des deux protagonistes, que ce soit dans le désir, l'attente, l'amour ou l'hésitation, et The Bridges of Madison County parvient à être bouleversant et déchirant. De simples moments s'apparentant à du quotidien prennent une dimension forte et magnifique sous la caméra de Clint, et plusieurs séquences en deviennent inoubliables, à l'image de la première danse ou de l'instant pluvieux. Et la musique composé par Lennie Niehaus ainsi que le thème principal renforce les émotions de plusieurs scènes et nous touchent en plein cœur. Et pour nous faire vibrer encore plus, en 1996, Meryl Streep obtient l'Oscar de la meilleure actrice pour son rôle, Vraiment mérité ! Cette lucidité et cette modestie contribuent à faire de ce long-métrage une œuvre bouleversante.
![Customer image](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/G/01/x-locale/common/transparent-pixel._V192234675_.gif)
![](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/46becd9c-117b-4928-b309-ccc29a6845ed._CR83,0,333,333_SX48_.jpg)
Reviewed in France on December 6, 2022
Ces jours intenses de la passion, après lesquels il n’y a plus qu’à attendre la mort, Eastwood les situe en 1963 comme l’action d’Un Monde parfait. C’est l’année de l’assassinat de Kennedy et de l’intensification de l’engagement américain au Vietnam.
Probablement l’histoire d’amour la plus puissante jamais réalisée dans l’histoire du cinéma, tant elle possède la capacité d’émouvoir le plus grand nombre, tout en saisissant l’essence même du sentiment amoureux dans ce qu’il a de plus dévastateur. D’autant plus que le long métrage de Clint Eastwood, qui tient également un des deux rôles principaux, dresse en filigrane de cette romance impossible un immense portrait de femme, à la fois terriblement moderne et intimiste, d’une épouse au foyer tenant sa maisonnette aux côtés d’un mari certes affectueux, mais qui délaisse peu à peu sa vie conjugale et, de surcroît, la vie sociale et sexuelle de sa compagne. Il semble que la vie de Francesca soit devenu un pénitencier à ciel ouvert, comme si son esprit, tout ce qui faisait d’elle une femme unique avec de grandes aspirations, disparaissait de la réalité, comme si elle s’effaçait de son plein gré de ce simulacre informe qu’est le cocon familial, jusqu’à ce qu’il ne reste qu’un corps matériel n’ayant plus la capacité ni de s’exprimer, ni de se déplacer. Meryl Streep réitère une nouvelle fois sa démonstration de force filmique et trouve, dans le rôle extrêmement exigeant de Francesca Johnson. Un terrain d’expérimentation où elle peut traverser cette histoire, jouant sur une gamme exceptionnelle de sentiments contradictoires, avec une grâce et un charisme inégalables. A son image, on évoquera cette séquence, devenue mythique, de la station essence, où tombe une pluie torrentielle, exutoire psychologique inébranlable de nos deux protagonistes, qui se regardent une toute dernière fois, comme s’ils se connaissaient depuis toujours. Cet échange, d’une puissance évocatrice indicible, à l’orée du rêve fantasmatique.
Le cadre du film est superbe, Clint sublime les paysages, l'Iowa, les lieux qui sentent bon l'Amérique des années 50's, ou encore la nuit et les divers endroits qu'il va filmer (le bar, le pont ou l'intérieur de la maison). Cet aspect participe pleinement à l'atmosphère si atypique du film, naviguant entre charme, romantisme et mélancolie. Les deux comédiens principaux sont remarquables, et marquent le film par autant d'élégance que de spontanéité et de naturel, permettant de nous faire vivre cette histoire. Les instants de romantisme sont nombreux et toujours amenés naturellement. L'émotion qui en découle est forte, avec plusieurs séquences incroyables où l'on ne ressent que les sentiments des deux protagonistes, que ce soit dans le désir, l'attente, l'amour ou l'hésitation, et The Bridges of Madison County parvient à être bouleversant et déchirant. De simples moments s'apparentant à du quotidien prennent une dimension forte et magnifique sous la caméra de Clint, et plusieurs séquences en deviennent inoubliables, à l'image de la première danse ou de l'instant pluvieux. Et la musique composé par Lennie Niehaus ainsi que le thème principal renforce les émotions de plusieurs scènes et nous touchent en plein cœur. Et pour nous faire vibrer encore plus, en 1996, Meryl Streep obtient l'Oscar de la meilleure actrice pour son rôle, Vraiment mérité ! Cette lucidité et cette modestie contribuent à faire de ce long-métrage une œuvre bouleversante.
![Customer image](https://cdn.statically.io/img/m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51S2fism4bL._SY88.jpg)
![Customer image](https://cdn.statically.io/img/m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61gKGsqN-WL._SY88.jpg)
![Customer image](https://cdn.statically.io/img/m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71+hKqOh4tL._SY88.jpg)
![](https://images-fe.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/S/amazon-avatars-global/default._CR0,0,1024,1024_SX48_.png)
ありがとうございます。