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Director James Ivory, along with his partner and
frequent collaborator, Ismail Merchant, and screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala are
sometimes disdained by the young and trendy for their more traditional, literary
movie-making; it's the Masterpiece Theatre syndrome. Were they never to make another film,
though, they would still have to be included in the roster of the greats -- consider a
filmography that includes Shakespeare-Wallah
(1965), Heat And Dust (1982), A Room With A View (1986), Howard's
End (1992), and The Remains Of The Day (1993).
Unfortunately, their current entry, Le Divorce, won't be
added to the list of their many successful efforts. Adapted from the novel by Diane
Johnson, Le Divorce centers on a subject that has marked the work of this team in
the past--the clash of people from different cultures whose destinies converge. Here it is
Isabel Walker (Kate Hudson), a young American who travels to Paris to be with her pregnant
older sister, Roxy (Naomi Watts). Roxy is married to Charles-Henri (Melvil Poupad), who
comes, with trust funds, from an haute bourgeois French family headed by his matriarchal
mother (Leslie Caron).