I didn't see this when it came out, so new to me. DeNiro is excellent. Jodie Foster as 13 year-old prostitute would not be allowed (for good reasons) to do the part today. Cybil Shepherd in the movie for a little glamor. Highlight DeNiro's mental collapse. Weak ending, DeNiro a hero for killing Foster's pimp. Her loving parents take her back to their home. (Why did she run away?)
"To all humankind, Tess was only a passing thought. Even to friends, she was only a frequently passing thought." Angel Clare is a good character. He's "enlightened," in so many ways, but when Tess's confesses her "crime," he reverts to ancestral form . . . Tess's "confession" comes earlier than I expected, right after Angel reveals that he has had a bad moment with a woman. Tess points out the similarity in their transgressions, though his is the only true transgression, expecting forgiveness. She doesn't get it. She returns to her mother . . . realizes she can't stay with her. Thoughts to suicide. Unhappiness that divorce is not possible. Departs. Tragic in that the two, if Angel could just see clearly, would indeed be a great couple, each adding to the other. Nature as a definite force involved in the tragedy. It's not neutral--when things go bad, the very skies mock Tess. Tess as unaware of the power of her bea...
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