Germany 1912.
Friedrich is a young man of
humble origins with a degree in chemistry employed by Karl Hoffmeister, who immediately understood the character and
potential of the young man and decided to make him his protégé. Suffering from
a serious heart disease, Hoffmeister is forced to work at home, where he lives
with his wife, Lotte, and her son Otto. Impressed by Friedrich’s zeal, he promotes him as his personal
secretary and urges him to move into his
large mansion.
Happy but confused by the feelings he starts feeling for his
master’s and benefactor’s young wife, Friedrich accepts both accommodation and
challenge, anyhow. The proximity feeds the feeling and reveals an affinity
difficult to control, at least until
Hoffmeister decides to send Friedrich to Mexico to follow a new and important
project. Lotte can’t hide her own feelings any longer, especially because the
idea of living without Friedrich is now unbearable. However the two young lovers resist their
passion and promise one to the other to wait until Friedrich is back and Lotte
free from her duties to her husband.
Convinced that leaving
is the right thing to do,
Friedrich promises Lotte he will come back and they will be able to
fulfill their dream of love. But the Great War and a total naval block will
make Friedrich an exile, forcing him to stay away from Lotte for six long
years . Their meeting after his return
home will be painfully awkward. They will have to start over new.
This film is the adaptation of the novel by Stefan Zweig, Journey
to the Past. It is a tender, touching love story that is never melodramatic
or banally sentimental. It’s the story of a love that is intense and
overwhelming when hopelessly impossible, and that becomes tender, but uncertain
and awkward after a long period of
distance, when it is finally free to be.
The promise of the title is what makes this love story
special. The two lovers promise each other loyalty, faith and love when divided,
believing that delayed gratification will reward them with great happiness
after long suffering. But, not allowed
to see their initial passion turns into
love, they’ll realize the tension and
the intention are almost swept away by
wartime when they meet again.
The film closes with the hope that the two will be able to start afresh and
to build something totally new.
Alan Rickman, Rebecca Hall and Richard Madden deliver very
convincing performances. You see a romance bloom, pause and then grow into something
different as time and circumstances change. You watch a generous man fight
against his jealousy because he knows he is dying, a man offering his wife a
chance to be happy with a young man he really appreciates but then getting back
to a more natural sense of property and dignity.
This is a period movie delicately and exquisitely crafted by
director Patrice Laconte. Its delicate, lyrical
poetry will linger in your mind and stay with you once the story is over.
“But love truly becomes love only when, no longer an embryo developing painfully in the darkness of the body, it ventures to confess itself with lips and breath. However hard it tries to remain a chrysalis, a time comes when the intricate tissue of the cocoon tears, and out it falls, dropping from the heights to the farthest depths, falling with redoubled force into the startled heart.”
― Stefan Zweig, Journey Into the Past
3 comments:
Looks very good. And Alan Rickman! I should put this on my list of movies to see.
too many people dislike this movie...we are the lucky ones! :)
An ex student of mine (a boy) suggested me to warch this movie, Alessia and Trudy, because he thought I'd like it. What puzzled me was ... How could he know me so well? Because I did like it! I hope you can get to see it, Trudy! And I'm really glad we've got something more to share, Alessia :-)
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