A doctor named Charles loves his work very married to a woman at the age of 18 and live in a small country called Univille but their relationship is increasing in failure because of neglecting his wife and left alone most of the time and try to achieve her dreams to find a relationship full of love but show restraint in the first group Of dramatic events in her life.
It is certainly beautiful... But the story, which follows a remorseless arc, is reduced to episodes that amount to a narrative shorthand and many characters - notably Giamatti's Homais - are hopelessly underwritten.
With her thousand-mile frown, Mia Wasikowska was born to play Victorian heroines, though she's a little too intelligent and self-aware for Flaubert's Emma Bovary.
For all the talk of romance, this is a Madame Bovary that's grounded in the real - in the sounds and colors of Emma's world, in its material limitations and splendors.