The Human Stain Movie Review (2025)

Common Sense Media Review

By Nell Minow , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 17+

Flawed adaptation of Roth's novel isn't for kids.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 17+?

Any Positive Content?

  • Language

    a lot

    Some very strong language.

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  • Sex, Romance & Nudity

    a lot

    Some very explicit sexual references and situations, including nudity.

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  • Drinking, Drugs & Smoking

    some

    Characters drink and smoke.

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  • Violence & Scariness

    some

    Character deaths. Characters in peril.

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  • Parents Need to Know

    Parents need to know that this movie has some very strong language and some very explicit sexual references and situations, including nudity. Characters drink and smoke, sometimes to excess. Characters are in peril and there are some tragic (offscreen) deaths. The movie's themes about racism and "sanctimony" are provocatively presented. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.

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  • The Human Stain Movie Review (1)

The Human Stain

Parent and Kid Reviews

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  • Parents say (1)
  • Kids say

age 17+

Based on 1 parent review

colten97 Parent of 13-year-old

October 11, 2012

age 17+

A Near Perfect Film

I honestly can not think of a single thing wrong with this movie. The actors are top rate actors that consistently turn in exceptional performances. This movie is no exception.The plot is intriguing. The pasts of the main protagonists unfold, making their characters exceptionally deep. We get to see these characters evolve in interesting and compelling ways. There are shades-of-grey in these characters. We don't have the perfect hero. We have gentle people with kind hearts who make mistakes.The direction is perfectly understated. There is a lot of nuance in the way the scenes are filmed and the way in which the actors are framed. The love scenes are filmed without graphic nudity. Note the way in which Anthony Hopkins places his hands on Nicole Kidman's back. It is so loving and tender and intimate.Even the editing is right on. The length of the film, at 106 minutes, is the perfect length. There are no wasted scenes.Some of the material is hard to watch. Note the posture and the facial expression on Anthony Hopkins in the kitchen scene in which Nicole Kidman is giving him a hard time. It is subtle and painful to watch.If you are into light-hearted escapist film, this isn't for you. The subject matter is deep and difficult. I like these kinds of movies and this one is one of the best in class.Kudos to all involved with this film.

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What's the Story?

When Professor Coleman Silk (Anthony Hopkins) calls on two students who aren't present and asks, "Are they spooks?," he's hit with a formal complaint because the two students are African-American, and "spook" is considered a racist epithet. Coleman points out that since he'd never seen the students, he couldn't have meant the word that way. But no one defends him, despite his long-time support for minorities. Coleman has one more rebuttal up his sleeve -- he's a light-skinned African-American who's been "passing" as white for years. Coleman leaves the college and tries unsuccessfully to write about the injustice before asking reclusive novelist Zuckerman (Gary Sinise) to write his story. They become friends, but Zuckerman turns him down. Then Coleman gets involved with the beautiful-but-guarded Faunia (Nicole Kidman), who's stalked by an abusive ex (Ed Harris). Coleman's past is shown in flashbacks, and just as Coleman and Faunia are able to reveal themselves to each other for the first time, volatile forces from the past converge inexorably and terribly.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:

Parents say: (1):

Kids say: Not yet rated Rate movie

THE HUMAN STAIN is a flawed but engrossing story about the way that people try to escape their pasts. It's also about the way that carefully constructed new personas, no matter how scrubbed and burnished, can't erase the stain of the original. Philip Roth's ambitious and literary novel is awkwardly adapted for the screen. The book's almost allegorical structure is supported by Roth's use of language, but on screen, the characters are more plot devices than people. Zuckerman, though well-played by Sinise, is a narrative convention who adds nothing to the drama. And the menace provided by Faunia's Vietnam veteran ex-husband borders on melodrama.

The most affecting part of the story is the flashbacks. Young Coleman (Wentworth Miller), in love for the first time with a beautiful, intelligent, and sympathetic Midwestern girl (Jacinda Barrett), experiments with the feeling of being not black or white but just free of any color. Then he brings her home to meet his mother (Anna Deavere Smith), not letting either one know ahead of time that they're of different races. Nothing that happens in the Hopkins/Kidman segment of the story is anywhere near as compelling.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about Coleman's choices. What were the turning points? Would he have chosen differently if he had known that the world was about to change so dramatically?

Movie Details

  • In theaters: October 30, 2003
  • On DVD or streaming: July 19, 2004
  • Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Gary Sinise, Nicole Kidman
  • Director: Robert Benton
  • Inclusion Information: Female actors
  • Studio: Miramax
  • Genre: Drama
  • Run time: 107 minutes
  • MPAA rating: R
  • MPAA explanation: language and sexuality/nudity
  • Last updated: July 3, 2022

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The Human Stain Movie Review (2025)
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