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Hysteria

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United Kingdom, France, Germany · 2011
Rated R · 1h 40m
Director Tanya Wexler
Starring Maggie Gyllenhaal, Hugh Dancy, Jonathan Pryce, Felicity Jones
Genre Comedy, Romance

Mortimer Granville is a doctor in Victorian England with nonconformist sensibilities. When he begins treating women for "hysteria" by massaging them to orgasm -- despite his not knowing what an orgasm is -- his practice causes him to invent the vibrator and leads him to a romance with a feminist.

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What are critics saying?

63

Slant Magazine by

Hysteria's happy ending isn't the type that calls for a cigarette, and it certainly isn't the one the film deserves.

50

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Dancy manages a few sly moments, and Everett is as ever a scene-stealer, if barely recognizable under a beard and altered features, and with a raspy voice. But the estimable Pryce and Jones are wasted, along with many other fine thesps, while Gyllenhaal works too gratingly hard in an already strained role.

63

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Hysteria's "hook" is that it chronicles the development of one of the 20th century's most popular home appliances: the vibrator. However, although the details surrounding the deplorable state of women's medicine during the Victorian era are intriguing, the central story - a romantic comedy between a progressive woman and a forward-thinking doctor - is flaccid.

40

Time Out by Joshua Rothkopf

There's nothing strictly wrong with any of this, except for the fact that even a buttoned-down period piece like "Topsy-Turvy" feels sexier.

60

Boxoffice Magazine by Sara Maria Vizcarrondo

Though the film is a fairly plastic British period piece with all the intimacy of a Hitachi Wand, the script captures some delicate and intelligent facets of a tensely conflicted era.

65

Movieline by Stephanie Zacharek

The picture is at least spirited, a jaunty trifle that's low on eroticism but high on cartoony coquettishness. Like the little motorized whatsit that is its subject, it does have its charms.

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