fiction.wikisort.org - MovieReunion is a 1989 British dramatic film based on the 1971 novel of the same name by Fred Uhlman, directed by Jerry Schatzberg from a screenplay by Harold Pinter. It stars Jason Robards. The film was released in France under the title L' Ami Retrouvé and in Germany as Der wiedergefundene Freund.[1]
1989 British film
Reunion |
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 Poster for Reunion 1989 |
Directed by | Jerry Schatzberg |
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Screenplay by | Harold Pinter |
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Based on | the novel by Fred Uhlman |
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Produced by | Anne Francois |
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Starring | Jason Robards Samuel West Christien Anholt Francoise Fabian |
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Cinematography | Bruno De Keyzer |
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Edited by | Martine Barraque |
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Music by | Philippe Sarde |
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Distributed by | Rank Film Distributors Ltd |
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Release date | 6 July 1989 (UK release) |
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Running time | 110 minutes |
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Countries | United Kingdom France West Germany |
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Language | English |
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The story is centred on the "enchanted friendship" of two teenagers in 1933 Germany. Hans Strauss (Christien Anholt) is the son of a Jewish doctor and Konradin Von Lohenburg (Samuel West) is from an aristocratic family. The background is the rise of Nazism. Jason Robards plays the older Hans in the 1970s as he prepares to travel to Germany for the first time since the 1930s.[2] The film was shot on location in Berlin, New York and Stuttgart.[3] Reunion was nominated for a Golden Palm at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival.[4]
Plot
American lawyer Henry Strauss (Robards) is preparing to return to Germany for the first time since he left in 1933 following Adolf Hitler's rise to power. He is seeking to renew an "enchanting friendship" of his youth with aristocrat Konradin Von Lohenburg (West).
Strauss was the son of a Jewish doctor and the friends did not see that around them the rise of Nazism would lead to their separation. Their travels together and philosophical discussions against the elegant background of 1930s Stuttgart form the main part of the film, told in flashback.
The older Henry's search for his childhood friend leads to a startling revelation as he discovers what became of Konradin after Hitler took power.
Cast
- Jason Robards as Henry (formerly Hans) Strauss, as an old man
- Christien Anholt as Hans Strauss, as a young man
- Samuel West as Count Konradin von Lohenburg
- Françoise Fabian as Countess von Lohenburg, Konradin's mother
- Jacques Brunet as Count von Lohenburg, Konradin's father
- Bert Parnaby as Dr. Jakob Strauss, Hans' father
- Barbara Jefford as Frau Strauss, Hans' mother
- Shebah Ronay as Countess Gertrud, as a young woman
- Dorothea Alexander as Countess Gertrud, as an old woman
- Maureen Kerwin as Lisa, Henry's daughter
- Frank Baker - The Zionist
- Tim Barker as Zimmermann, a teacher
- Imke Barnstedt as Girl in Tax Building
- Gideon Boulting as Prince Hubertus
- Alan Bowyer as Bollacher
- Rupert Degas as Muller
- Robert Dietl - Gardener at Old Grafin's
- Nicholas Pandolfi as Reutter
- Roland Schäfer [de] as Judge Freisler on TV
Critical reception
- Time Out said of the film - "This moving rendition of Fred Uhlman's novel, about boyhood friendship betrayed under the destructive momentum of Nazism, shows Schatzberg at his (albeit limited) best." "Harold Pinter's tight and unobtrusive script, Trauner's fine production design and Philippe Sarde's muted but expressive score ensure a feeling of all-round professionalism."[5]
- The New York Times said "'Reunion' is gratifying in the small ways most familiar from public-television's depictions of English upper-class behavior. The offhanded elegance of its settings, and the attractive crispness of its schoolboy manners ("Oh, he just rants and raves, doesn't he?" one of the film's cavalier young characters says about Hitler) are a major part of its gently decorative appeal."[2]
- Channel 4 said "Nothing in Schatzberg's filmography makes the heart leap, but this film - adapted by Pinter from an autobiographical novel by Ulman - stands out above the rest. It's a quietly decent film that takes place primarily (via a flashback) in the early 1930s."[6]
Notes
External links
Films directed by Jerry Schatzberg |
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Plays |
- The Room (1957)
- The Birthday Party (1957)
- The Dumb Waiter (1957)
- A Slight Ache (1958)
- The Hothouse (1958)
- The Caretaker (1959)
- A Night Out (1959)
- Night School (1960)
- The Dwarfs (1960)
- The Collection (1961)
- The Lover (1962)
- Tea Party (1964)
- The Homecoming (1964)
- The Basement (1966)
- Landscape (1967)
- Silence (1968)
- Old Times (1970)
- Monologue (1972)
- No Man's Land (1974)
- Betrayal (1978)
- Family Voices (1980)
- A Kind of Alaska (1982)
- Victoria Station (1982)
- One for the Road (1984)
- Mountain Language (1988)
- The New World Order (1991)
- Party Time (1991)
- Moonlight (1993)
- Ashes to Ashes (1996)
- Celebration (1999)
- Remembrance of Things Past (2000)
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Dramatic sketches |
- The Black and White (1959)
- Trouble in the Works (1959)
- The Last to Go (1959)
- Request Stop (1959)
- Special Offer (1959)
- That's Your Trouble (1959)
- That's All (1959)
- Interview (1959)
- Applicant (1959)
- Dialogue for Three (1959)
- Umbrellas (1960)
- Night (1969)
- Precisely (1983)
- God's District (1997)
- Press Conference (2002)
- Apart From That (2006)
- The Pres and an Officer (2018)
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Screenplays | |
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Related articles |
- Works
- Bibliography
- Characteristics
- Honours and awards
- Relationship with academia
- The Harold Pinter Archive in the British Library
- Harold Pinter and politics
- Art, Truth and Politics
- Pinter's People
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