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Aspiring writer Hubbell Gardiner (Robert Redford) and Jewish political activist Katie Morosky (Barbra Streisand) meet at college in the 1930s. Although attracted to each other, a romance does not ensue. However, they meet again during the Second World War, beginning an affair which eventually leads to marriage. But the relationship comes under strain when Katie begins to feel that Hubbell, pursuing his writing career in California, is beginning to sell out. (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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Lima 

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English A huge hit at the time of its release and still Columbia Pictures' highest-grossing film. It’s the film that definitively made Robert Redford America's sex symbol. He actually didn't want to do the film, he didn't want to seem like a kind of sidekick to the film's main star Barbra Streisand, so the script had to be rewritten many times before he accepted the role. And he did well. The chemistry between him and Streisand has the power of trinitrotoluene. The dialogues, benefiting from the contrast between an idealistic and slightly neurotic fighter for peace and human rights and a pragmatic successful screenwriter, are a joy to listen to. I had never really liked Streisand, but she won me over with this film. The scene when the emotionally torn woman persuades Hubbell on the phone to come to her is an acting masterpiece, you can feel real emotions there, acting to the very core. The impressive nostalgic ending and the beautiful title tune only complete the absolute cinematic experience. Perfection. ()