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It's 1931 in Paris when Anais Nin first meets Henry Miller and his wife June. Attracted by their bohemian lifestyle, Nin starts an affair with Henry while pursuing June, involving in their tormented relationship.

















3 July 1919, Paris, France


19 August 1965, Lisbon, Portugal

5 May 1957, Mbabane, Union of South Africa [now Swaziland]







30 December 1942, San Diego, California, USA




26 July 1959, South Orange, New Jersey, USA


1913, Luchon, Haute-Garonne, France

14 November 1932, Algiers, Algeria


24 October 1953, Paris, France

13 March 1957, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France

12 October 1955, Tourcoing, Nord, France

27 February 1948, Paris, France

21 March 1958, New Cross, London, England, UK

9 November 1934, Paris, France

23 November 1928, Roanne, Loire, France

29 April 1970, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

8 July 1959, Lausanne, Switzerland




August 09, 2007
A bawdy and joyous celebration of sensuality. A great cinematic tip of the hat to the "happiest man alive."
May 20, 2003
Presented with excessive weight.
January 01, 2000
As outwardly beautiful as it is inwardly counterfeit.
October 03, 2015
Following Kaufman's impressive cinematic adaptations of such difficult-to-film works as The Right Stuff and The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Henry and June is a major disappointment.
January 01, 2000
Beautiful, captivating and spectacularly uninhibited.
October 11, 2002
A lush biopic unafraid of deep thoughts and sexuality.
August 04, 2002
too long, too talky and yet strangely intriguing
February 06, 2003
Beautiful, but more than a little overwrought.
August 21, 2003
A big shame.
January 01, 2000
This movie is dull and tedious, with two central performances that are extremely artificial.
June 24, 2006
An hour too long.
July 07, 2011
Philip Kaufman's erotic chronicle of Henry Miller in Paris, the first movie to get NC-17, is disappointingly long and uneventful, though nice to look at.