
Enjoy FREE movies and series with your Prime (USA) subscription or when you start a 30-day free trial!
We don't have any details of the plot right now.
Leave your thoughts about Lady Chatterley's Lover.
| TheWrapTomris LafflyOften draped over each other like a pair of gorgeous statues, O’Donnell and Corrin strike palpable chemistry throughout, selling both their desire for one another and the consequent love born out of it believably. |
| Entertainment WeeklyLeah GreenblattAn unabashedly heady romance, rich in pretty costumes — when they're wearing them — and lush, lusty atmosphere. |
| TimeStephanie ZacharekThough Lawrence’s views of sex overall were complicated and sometimes contradictory, and not always what you’d call progressive, Clermont-Tonnerre and her actors draw from his ideas with clear-eyed generosity, presenting them so that they feel fresh as a new crocus. |
| Film ThreatAlan NgLady Chatterley’s Lover has the look, feel, and beauty of your Merchant-Ivory high-brow English dramas. Simply add sex and nudity. |
| The GuardianPeter BradshawLove and sex, two things taken so casually for granted in so many different kinds of story, here become totemic articles of faith. Lady Chatterley still has the power to move. |
| Little White LiesPatrick SproullWhat distinguishes Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre’s newest interpretation from its predecessors is its deft, mature understanding of what makes both Lady Chatterley and her lover tick. |
| ReelViewsJames BerardinelliIt’s crisply paced and, although there are times when Lady Chatterley’s Lover seems like little more than an intellectually-approved bodice-ripper, it’s an impressively mounted production that looks good and is emotionally true to the characters and their era. |
| San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleThis adaptation does not allow for the energy and primal healing quality of sexuality. The movie’s grief of tone finds no antidote in the exuberance of this physical connection. The rhapsodic language of Lawrence’s text gives way to the spectacle of grinding between two average-looking mortals. |
| RogerEbert.comSheila O'MalleyYou feel you are running alongside the characters, trying to catch up with them on their journeys forward. |
| The AtlanticShirley LiDe Clermont-Tonnerre understands that the lovers’ behavior and Lawrence’s social commentary no longer spur much pearl-clutching, so instead, she surprises viewers by adding uncanny elements to her most explicit scenes. |