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  1. Critics reviews. A young female landowner in 1840s Jamaica marries a just-arrived Englishman to avoid losing her property. All seems to be perfect, love arises, and happiness is on the way, but she is hiding an old secret regarding her childhood and her mother.

  2. Naomi Watts: Fanny Grey. Sargasso Sea – Im Meer der Leidenschaft (Originaltitel: Wide Sargasso Sea) ist ein australisches Filmdrama aus dem Jahr 1993. Regie führte John Duigan, der das Drehbuch gemeinsam mit Carole Angier und Jan Sharp nach dem Roman von Jean Rhys, einem Prequel zu Charlotte Brontës Jane Eyre, schrieb.

  3. Wide Sargasso Sea is a 1993 Australian film directed by John Duigan, and starring Karina Lombard and Nathaniel Parker. It is an adaptation of Jean Rhys's 1966 novel of the same name.

  4. Wide Sargasso Sea. Adapted from Jean Rhys' award-winning novel, this is a prequel to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and paints a rather different story of Mr. Rochester's first wife. Set in lush 19th century Jamaica, this is the story of the relationship between a passionate Creole heiress, Antoinette, and a brooding Englishman, Edward Rochester.

  5. 10 de ago. de 2016 · A young female landowner in 1840s Jamaica marries a just-arrived Englishman to avoid losing her property. All seems to be perfect, love arises, and happiness...

  6. 16 de abr. de 1993 · Written by Wuchak on May 30, 2019. In the wake of Jamaican emancipation, French colonist Annette Cosway falls into poverty and marries racist Englishman Paul Mason. But when Annette's young son dies in a fire started by former slaves, Mason flees to England, leaving his grief-stricken wife and her Creole daughter Antoinette behind. Soon ...

  7. Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea should be as widely read as Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, but it isn’t. This is a surprisingly competent adaption of a really complex novel. Despite a limited budget and and being highly oversexed, the film does a good job of unpeeling the many layers of dementedness in both Rhys and Brontë’s handling of racial dynamics in the British colonial empire.