Les Miserables 1998 | 720p |

Upon its release in 1998, the film received mixed to positive reviews. Critics praised Neeson and Rush’s performances and the film’s earnest, straightforward approach. Roger Ebert gave it three out of four stars, calling it “a powerful and moving film.” However, many Victor Hugo purists and fans of the musical were disappointed. They argued that the removal of the Thénardiers, Gavroche, Enjolras, and the full revolutionary arc drained the story of its social and political weight, reducing it to a simple chase thriller. The film was also criticized for its abrupt ending, which downplays the novel’s deeply Christian and redemptive finale.

The 1998 Les Misérables is not the definitive version of Hugo’s epic, nor does it aim to be. It is a bold, lean, and psychologically intense interpretation. For viewers who want a faithful, page-by-page adaptation, the 2000 French miniseries or the 1935 black-and-white film may be better choices. But for those seeking a star-driven, emotionally accessible, and thematically concentrated drama about the battle between the law and love, the 1998 film stands as a compelling, if imperfect, achievement. It proves that even a fragmented Victor Hugo, stripped to its core, still possesses the power to move an audience. Its enduring value lies not in its completeness, but in its focused and powerful portrayal of a man who chooses mercy over revenge, and another who cannot live in a world where mercy has won. les miserables 1998

Valjean, transformed by this mercy, breaks his parole, disappears, and eight years later re-emerges as Monsieur Madeleine, the wealthy and beloved mayor of a small town and owner of a factory. There, he meets Fantine (Uma Thurman), a vulnerable young woman who has been fired from his factory by a cruel foreman after her secret of having an illegitimate child, Cosette, is discovered. Desperate to pay for Cosette’s keep with the crooked innkeepers the Thénardiers, Fantine sells her hair and then turns to prostitution. Valjean, learning of his factory’s role in her ruin, feels responsible. After Javert (Geoffrey Rush), now a police inspector assigned to the town, arrests her, Valjean insists she be taken to a hospital and promises to fetch her daughter. Upon its release in 1998, the film received