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A poor woman's romance with the privileged son of a hotel owner leads to tragedy when she is torn between the traditions of her family life and the dreams and ambitions that her education has given her.
Trishna is an admirable effort, but it's too detached and disinterested in the viewer to make an impact. This is a tough film to get through, and even if one makes it to the end, there's little reward to be found.
Winterbottom's socially conscious, contemporary adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel Tess of the d'Urbervilles is first-rate.
August 02, 2012
Metro Times (Detroit, MI)
Things start off promising, but, by the time the final reel rolls, Winterbottom's too-detached style seems to be willfully wallowing in oversimplified misery.
Trishna engages the potent collisions of the rural and the urban, the poor and the rich, and considers how these interactions unfold in a romance and how they might also destroy it.
August 03, 2012
Detroit News
Winterbottom has complete control of the film's look and feel, but the story seems to run away from him.