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The Wife | Official Trailer HD (2018)
Trailer

THE WIFE: Clip - "Can we try to enjoy this?" Now on Blu-ray & Digital!
Clip

THE WIFE: Clip - "Nathaniel" Now on Blu-ray & Digital!
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THE WIFE: Clip - "The Walnut" Now on Blu-ray & Digital!
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THE WIFE: Clip - "Why did you marry me?" Now on Blu-ray & Digital!
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THE WIFE: Clip - "The Speech" Now on Blu-ray & Digital!
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THE WIFE: Clip - "Writer Has To Be Read" On Digital January 22 & on Blu-ray January 29!
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Glenn Close on The Wife | Film4 Interview Special
Featurette

The Wife | "Secret Desires" Official Clip HD (2018)
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Academy Conversations: The Wife
Featurette

The Wife | "Nobel Prize" Official Clip HD (2018)
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Glenn Close is The Wife | TIFF 2017
Featurette
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A review by CinemaSerf
6.0
Written on June 30, 2024
"Joe" (Jonathan Pryce) has won the Nobel prize for literature and so must travel with his wife "Joan" (Glenn Close) to Stockholm to receive the award from the King of Sweden. Embarking on Concorde (which never flew to Stockholm) the couple arrive to be feted by Nobel literati and pestered by "Nathanial" (Christian Slater) who is determined to write a biography of this author. Neither husband nor wide want anything to do with him, and swiftly we learn that their son "David" (Max Irons) doesn't really want too much to do with his father, either. Using some flashbacks to their courting days, we learn a little about this couple and discover that much of their lives is but a façade with secrets and rancour galore in their marital closet. It's a drunken chat between the son and the journalist that proves to be the familial flashpoint and the timing could hardly be worse! Whilst most of the acting plaudits must go to a calculating performance from Close, Pryce isn't terrible either - unlike messrs. Slater and Irons who really add little to a story that takes about five minutes to work out. It's all watchable enough, but there's no chemistry nor does it feel very natural at any point in the proceedings. Sure, the whole Nobel paraphernalia doesn't make that too easy, but somehow it's like a short stage play that someone has decided would make for a film - without really realising just how sterile it would look.





























































