
Movie spotlight
To the Lighthouse
A faithful dramatization of Virginia Woolf's novel. A lecturer, his family, the spinster Aunt Lily, an old friend, and a student, Charles Tansley, spend a summer in an isolated house in Cornwall just before World War I. The stern Mr. Ramsay scolds everybody, while Mrs. Ramsay is the linchpin in keeping the family together. Aunt Lily paints, and the family talk about sailing to the lighthouse, but the trip is always postponed.
Insights
Plot Summary
This adaptation of Virginia Woolf's classic novel centers on the Ramsay family and their guests during a summer holiday on the Isle of Skye before World War I. The narrative explores themes of time, memory, loss, and the subjective nature of reality as it shifts between the perspectives of various characters, particularly Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe.
Critical Reception
The 1983 television adaptation of 'To the Lighthouse' received a generally positive reception, praised for its faithful portrayal of Virginia Woolf's complex novel and its atmospheric direction. While some critics noted the inherent difficulty in translating Woolf's stream-of-consciousness narrative to the screen, the performances were often highlighted as strong, capturing the emotional depth of the characters.
What Reviewers Say
Praised for its visual fidelity to the source material.
Performances, particularly of the central figures, were noted as strong.
Acknowledged the challenge of adapting Woolf's internal monologues.
Google audience: Information on specific Google user reviews for this 1983 adaptation is not readily available.
Fun Fact
The production was filmed on location in Scotland, aiming to capture the specific atmosphere described in Virginia Woolf's novel.
AI-generated overview · Verify ratings on official sources