Showing posts with label Jeroen Krabbé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeroen Krabbé. Show all posts

Thursday, December 19, 2024

On this day in movie history - No Mercy (1986):


No Mercy

directed by Richard Pearce,
written by Jim Carabatsos,
was released in the United States on December 19, 1986.
Music by Alan Silvestri.



Cast:

Richard Gere, Kim Basinger, Jeroen Krabbé, George Dzundza, Gary Basaraba, William Atherton, Terry Kinney, Bruce McGill, Ray Sharkey, Marita Geraghty, Aleta Mitchell, Fred Gratton, Dionisio, Ray Brown, Kim Chan, George Dickerson, Raynor Scheine, Carl Gordon, Victoria Edwards, Annalee Jefferies, Ed Nakamoto, John Snyder, Caris Corfman, Pearl Jones, John Schluter, Mike Bacarella, Charles S. Dutton, Harold Evans, Dave Petitjean, Stephen Payne, Leon Rippy, Bill Hart, Thomas Rosales Jr., Randall Trepagnier, Rogers G. Martin, Murphy Taylor, Alvin D. Bailey Sr., Nat Elmore, Joan Duvalle, Shelton Magee, Khon Reid, Helen Yu-shin McKay, Beau Holden, Robert J. Maxwell, Ely Pouget, Valarie Trapp.

Monday, December 16, 2024

Immortal Beloved (1994) – the spiritual and the sensual:



Immortal Beloved (1994)


Music is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life.
– Ludwig van Beethoven.
 
This was an easy movie for me to love, because I’ve always loved Beethoven’s music.
I first heard Moonlight Sonata when I was a young kid and couldn’t get it out of my head.
As I heard more, I quickly became a fan.


In Immortal Beloved (1994), Ludwig van Beethoven wrote a last will and testament, leaving everything to his “Immortal Beloved”, but doesn’t name her specifically in the letter.
The identity of Beethoven’s true love and heir is still speculated to this day.
Immortal Beloved, directed and written by Bernard Rose, offers a possible theory as to how it might have been.

The movie opens with Beethoven (Gary Oldman), at the moment of his death.
Lightning flashes illuminate his face and coincide with the powerful opening of Beethoven’s majestic Fifth Symphony, booming on the soundtrack.


The opening credits and music rise as Beethoven’s coffin is carried out of his home and through crowded streets.
Anton Schindler (Jeroen Krabbé), Beethoven’s – at times – long-suffering secretary and biographer, reads his eulogy at the graveside:


Anton Schindler:

Ludwig van Beethoven, the man who inherited and increased the immortal fame of Handel and Bach, of Haydn and Mozart, is now no more.
He was an artist, and who will stand beside him?
He was an artist, and what he was, he was only through music.
The thorns of life had wounded him deeply, so he held fast to his art, even when the gate through which it entered was shut.
Music spoke through a deafened ear to he who could no longer hear it.
He carried the music in his heart.
Because he shut himself off from the world, they called him hostile.
They said he was unfeeling, and called him callous.
But he was not hard of heart.
It is the finest blades that are most easily blunted, bent or broken.
He withdrew from his fellow man after he had given them everything, and had received nothing in return.
He lived alone, because he found no second self.
Thus he was, thus he died.
Thus he will live for all time.


While fending off aggressive money-grubbers, grasping for the inheritance, Schindler travels through Austria.


His personal mission is to seek out the women involved with Beethoven, discover the identity of the rightful recipient, and deliver the letter to her.
During his quest, he meets and interviews Giulietta Guicciardi (Valeria Golino), Anna-Marie Erdödy (Isabella Rossellini), Johanna Reiss (Johanna ter Steege) and Nanette Streicherova (Miriam Margolyes), the owner of a hotel where Beethoven stayed and trashed the room.


We learn about Beethoven’s childhood at the hands of his brutish father.
His progressive deafness.
Failing health.
Reclusiveness.
His failed attempt to mentor his nephew, Karl (Marco Hofschneider), possibly wishing to vicariously experience success again.


The supporting cast includes:
Gerard Horan, Christopher Fulford, Michael Culkin, Barry Humphries, Alexandra Pigg, Geno Lechner, and Claudia Solti.

Immortal Beloved was released on December 16, 1994,
coinciding with Ludwig van Beethoven’s birthday: December 16, 1770.


Gary Oldman’s performance, as Beethoven, is intense and faultless.
Oldman is a talented character actor, possessing a chameleon ability to transform himself, physically and psychologically, into any role he portrays.
He becomes the part.
I watch Oldman in this movie, and I feel like I’m watching the real Beethoven.


There are many unforgettable scenes: Beethoven resting his head on the piano, as he plays Moonlight Sonata … the Ode to Joy debut … the young Beethoven, floating in the shallows of the lake, the night sky reflected in the water, giving the illusion that he is suspended in the universe.

Since its release, Immortal Beloved has been compared with Amadeus (1984), directed by Miloš Forman, another fictionalized drama about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.


I also enjoyed Amadeus.
However, I can’t compare it to Immortal Beloved.
These are two separate movies, about different composers, made by different directors.

No matter whether the events depicted are historically accurate, or not, Immortal Beloved is the perfect merging of several genres: romance, love story, biopic, mystery, drama, tragedy.

The one question I was left with, a question that negates the theory of this movie, was why Beethoven didn’t go after Johanna Reiss after he arrived at the hotel and discovered she had left.
Beethoven could have followed her, even after venting and trashing the room.
That out of his system, he could have simply followed Johanna back to her home, caught up with her, and explained what happened during his journey and the reason for his late arrival.
The circumstances were out of Beethoven’s control.
I’m sure Johanna would have understood.


The mystery remains unsolved, but the movie is still a beautifully filmed drama from Mel Gibson's Icon production company.
An engaging, enthralling, and moving experience, with flawless performances throughout, and superb cinematography.
Like Ridley Scott’s The Duellists (1977), another true story of the Napoleonic era, the attention to period detail and costume design takes the viewer back in time to Beethoven’s world.


On a trivia note, Beethoven’s music is also a major theme of A Clockwork Orange (1971), directed by Stanley Kubrick, based on the novel by Anthony Burgess.
The Thieving Magpie, by Gioachino Rossini, is also on the soundtrack.


Beethoven’s Ode to Joy is also covered on the soundtrack to Die Hard (1988), directed by John McTiernan.


Beethoven’s music can also be heard in: A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965), The Breakfast Club (1985), Dead Poets Society (1989), Mr. Holland’s Opus (1995), and The King’s Speech (2010), and A Ghost Story (2017).


Ludwig van Beethoven was a genius.
An artist, driven to create by composing and expressing himself through music.
His brilliance is reflected in his work.
Work that has endured over centuries.
In the majestic music he gave to the world.
Created as he battled with his own flaws, inner demons, physical disability, and worsening health.


Finally, if the theory presented in this movie is accurate, Immortal Beloved is the story of love lost and rediscovered, even though too late for those involved.


As Dylan Thomas wrote:

Though lovers be lost, love shall not;
and death shall have no dominion.



Ludwig van Beethoven

December 16, 1770 – March 26, 1827

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

On this day in movie history - The Fugitive (1993):


The Fugitive,
directed by Andrew Davis,
written by Jeb Stuart and David Twohy,
based on a story by David Twohy,
was released in the United States on August 6, 1993.
Music by James Newton Howard.
Also based on the TV series The Fugitive,
starring David Janssen and created by Roy Huggins,
that ran for four seasons from 1963 to 1967.


Cast:
Harrison Ford, Tommy Lee Jones, Sela Ward, Joe Pantoliano, Andreas Katsulas, Jeroen Krabbé, Daniel Roebuck, Tom Wood, L. Scott Caldwell, Johnny Lee Davenport, Julianne Moore, Ron Dean, Joseph Kosala, Jane Lynch, Dick Cusack, Andy Romano, Nick Searcy, Eddie Bo Smith, Neil Flynn, Richard Riehle, Kirsten Nelson, David Darlow, Frank Ray Perilli, Lester Holt.