The Bridges of Madison County

The Bridges of Madison County(1995)

PG-13
06/02/1995 (US)Drama, Romance2h 15m
7.7

"The path of Francesca Johnson's future seems destined due to an unexpected fork in the road..."

Overview

Photographer Robert Kincaid wanders into the life of housewife Francesca Johnson for four days in the 1960s.

Clint Eastwood

Director

Richard LaGravenese

Screenplay

Where to Watch

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Media

Theatrical Trailer

Theatrical Trailer

Trailer

Meryl Streep On THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY

Meryl Streep On THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY

Featurette

An Old-Fashioned Love Story: Making The Bridges of Madison County (1995)

An Old-Fashioned Love Story: Making The Bridges of Madison County (1995)

Featurette

"Standing In The Rain"

"Standing In The Rain"

Clip

Flower Prank

Flower Prank

Clip

Phone

Phone

Clip

"Say This Once"

"Say This Once"

Clip

"Pendant"

"Pendant"

Clip

Fight

Fight

Clip

Clint Eastwood Salutes Meryl Streep at AFI Life Achievement Award

Clint Eastwood Salutes Meryl Streep at AFI Life Achievement Award

Featurette

Social

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A review by Wuchak
8.0

Written on June 22, 2020

_**Real-life questions about love and infidelity**_

RELEASED IN 1995 and directed by Clint Eastwood, “The Bridges of Madison County” details what happens in 1965 when a world-traveling photographer for National Geographic (Eastwood) inadvertently meets an Iowa Farm wife (Meryl Streep).

This is a drama about the nature of eros love and potential infidelity that will only be appreciated by mature viewers. It consists of two people meeting, getting acquainted, discovering something profound and then forced to make decisions that’ll determine the rest of their lives, as well as the consequences for those linked to them.

Some questions addressed include: What if you’re married and you meet someone you genuinely romantically love? What if you’re single and you meet a married person you profoundly love? How far do you (or can you) wisely take the relationship? What about others who would be negatively affected by pursuing the relationship?

These are all honest questions that most people have to consider at one time or another in their lives. The movie’s not corrupt for asking them or featuring a certain questionable act any more than the story of David & Bathsheba makes the Bible corrupt (or, arguably worse, the story of Judah & Tamar).

One character is too loose with morals, which he justifies by criticizing all the “borders” in life. But there are boundaries everywhere: National, state, county, city, school, government, business, social and… marital. The bottom line is: You’re either married or you’re not. If you’re married that means you have a committed lifelong covenant with your spouse. That’s what taking vows is all about. The movie tries to have its cake and eat it too by supporting such loyalty while flirting with the temptation to discard it in the name of true love. Regardless, the picture smacks of real life, real people, real (hard) decisions and is very well done, which is to be expected with Eastwood at the helm.

THE FILM RUNS 2 hours, 15 minutes, and was shot in Winterset & Adel, Iowa.

GRADE: A-