Fryderyc Chopin Movies

The music of this supreme melodist and harmonic innovator has been quoted in approximately 125 feature films across many genres. There is a fairly wide range of his compositions used, unlike many other composers for whom only a few of their more popular pieces were repeatedly employed in soundtracks. The waltzes, the ballades, the nocturnes, the sonatas, a couple of the polonaises, and the two piano concerti, all evoke the early to mid-19th century Romantic spirit but each piece is uniquely defined enough to suit a filmmaker's specific emotional intent.
In a touching early scene from the thriller The Net (1995), the protagonist Angela Bennet (Sandra Bullock), a computer programmer and debugger (who later has her identity taken away by forces trying to take over the government), visits her mother who is gradually losing her memory because of Alzheimer's syndrome. Her mother is attempting to play Chopin's Nocturne in B Major, Op. 32, No. 1 in starts and stops on a piano in the corner of a large living room where other residents of the rest home are watching television. Angela asks her mother if they can play the piece together because "you taught it to me." This puzzles the mother for a moment, and then she decides that her daughter, whom she does not recognize, must have been one of her students. The scene concludes with mother and daughter each playing one hand of the engagingly lovely piece.
One well-known Chopin composition surfaces in a very curious context in Luis Buñuel's Tristana (1970). Tristana can play the piano but gave it up when her mother died. She becomes the ward of a lecherous, hypocritical guardian, Don Lope, who takes sexual advantage of her. He preaches working at what gives pleasure and freedom in love but only when it suits himself -- his reactionary moralisms are in conflict with his socialist vision. Tristana falls for an artist, Horacio, and leaves with him. Meanwhile, Don Lupe inherits a fortune from his sister that keeps him from becoming impoverished. After two years, Horacio contacts Don Lope to tell him that Tristana has a leg tumor; though it's not a serious case, Tristana thinks she is dying and wants to spend her final days in Lupe's house because she still considers him a father figure. Up to this point, there have only been brief fragments of street music and absolutely no offscreen atmospheric orchestrations. After Tristana's leg is amputated, the viewer hears, from a distance and then in a close shot, Tristana playing Chopin's Revolutionary Etude. This piece seems to simultaneously express her frustration at her condition, and to signal that she now identifies with Lope's socialist spirit. She stops playing suddenly to talk to Horacio. She declares that she has decided to stay with Don Lope, wishes Horacio well, and launches into the music again. The years pass and fascinating psychological changes occur in all the characters. A quick, surreal series of flashbacks over a sustained electronic tone concludes this strange film.
Aspects of Chopin's life are presented in the 1952 Polish film Mlodosc Chopina (Young Chopin) from the Gustav Bach novel, and in Klaus Kirschner's Chopin: Bilder einer Trennung (Chopin: Progress of a Disintegration, 1993), a French/German co-production filmed in black-and-white in which characters reflect on Chopin's later years and his futile battle with tuberculosis. Although partly fictional, the spirit of Chopin's times, friends, and loves is probably best evoked in the charming Impromptu (1991). The film is primarily centered around the character of scandalous novelist George Sand, who became Chopin's lover and caretaker. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, All Movie Guide
2009  
 
Famed classical concert pianist Misha Dacic headlines this concert film, interpreting compositions by Rachmaninoff, Liszt, Scarlatti, Chopin and Bach. Some of the many pieces on display include Chopin's Introduction et Rondeau in E-Flat Major, Op. 16, Liszt's Fantasie und Fuge über den Choral 'Ad nos, ad salutarem undam', and Rachmaninoff's The Little Island, Op. 14, No. 2. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Misha Dacic
2005  
 
The Toronto Symphony Orchestra gets a new lease on life when new music director Peter Oundjian steps on board, and music lovers get to see a firsthand account of the creative firestorm that follows in this documentary from filmmaker Barbara Willis Sweete. A former classical violinist who studied under Itzhak Perlman before being forced down another path by a career-ending injury, the charismatic Oundjian caringly utilizes innovation, collaboration skills, and vast musical knowledge to steer the troubled orchestra back into calm waters while providing the musicians with the inspiration needed to truly refine their skills. In this feature documenting the early days of Oundjian's career with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, interviews with the musicians, candid footage, and performance footage all combine to tell the tale of a one man's tireless efforts to coax beauty from the edge of a deep abyss, and the creativity that it inspired. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Peter OundjianEmanuel Ax, (more)
2004  
 
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A friendly face masks the mind of a twisted serial killer in Spanish painter-turned-filmmaker Martin Garrido Barón's disturbing tale of a man who has finally succumbed to his most violent and murderous impulses. Antonio Frau (Fernando Acaso) has just been released from prison after serving 25 years for the murder of his former girlfriend. Upon inheriting a dilapidated motel from an unknown relative, Antonio determines that his sudden good fortune is a sign from God that he is to begin cleansing the world of those tortured souls who have lost the will to carry on. With a driving urge to achieve notoriety, Antonio sets about luring a series of naïve victims to room six for a series of grueling, blood-soaked purification rites which he meticulously documents in a diary of both images and the written word -- all the while hiding his heinous crimes from his unsuspecting new wife. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Fernando AcasoMaria Jose Bausa, (more)
2004  
 
Add Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 1 to QueueAdd Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 1 to top of Queue
In this concert performance, the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra performs works by Mozart, Strauss, Schubert, Chopin, Lehar, and Ziehrer. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Heinz WallbergTamara Lund, (more)
2002  
 
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Adam Miauczynski (Marek Kondrat) is a middle-aged literature professor, divorced, with a teenage son. Writer/director Marek Koterski's dark comedy Day of the Wacko follows Adam over the course of a long, typically unpleasant day as he deals with his noisy neighbors, his overbearing mother (Janina Traczykówna), his apathetic son (Michal Koterski), his bitchy ex-wife (Joanna Sienkiewicz), his rudely flatulent students, and, most debilitating of all, his own obsessive-compulsive behavior, and his immobilizing despair over the state of his life and the world around him. All the while, he reminisces about the woman he calls his great lost love, Ela (Monika Donner-Trelinska), and fantasizes about seeing her again. Reaching a fever pitch of depressed paranoia, Adam decides to travel to take a train to the beach to find some peace. After a harrowing trip, during which he's forced to share a compartment with a motley assortment of obnoxious fools, he arrives at the sea and lies out in the sand, hoping for a moment's tranquility as he continues his ongoing internal monologue, analyzing the failures of his life and his world. Day of the Wacko was nominated for a slew of Polish Film Awards, and won Best Actor (Kondrat) and Best Screenplay (Koterski). It was also shown at the 2003 Berlin International Film Festival, and was released straight-to-video in the U.S. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Marek KondratJanina Traczykówna, (more)
2002  
R  
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Filmmaker Roman Polanski, who as a boy growing up in Poland watched while the Nazis devastated his country during World War II, directed this downbeat drama based on the true story of a privileged musician who spent five years struggling against the Nazi occupation of Warsaw. Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody) is a gifted classical pianist born to a wealthy Jewish family in Poland. The Szpilmans have a large and comfortable flat in Warsaw which Wladyslaw shares with his mother and father (Maureen Lipman and Frank Finlay), his sisters Halina and Regina (Jessica Kate Meyer and Julia Rayner), and his brother, Henryk (Ed Stoppard). While Wladyslaw and his family are aware of the looming presence of German forces and Hitler's designs on Poland, they're convinced that the Nazis are a menace which will pass, and that England and France will step forward to aid Poland in the event of a real crisis. Wladyslaw's naïveté is shattered when a German bomb rips through a radio studio while he performs a recital for broadcast. During the early stages of the Nazi occupation, as a respected artist, he still imagines himself above the danger, using his pull to obtain employment papers for his father and landing a supposedly safe job playing piano in a restaurant. But as the German grip tightens upon Poland, Wladyslaw and his family are selected for deportation to a Nazi concentration camp. Refusing to face a certain death, Wladyslaw goes into hiding in a comfortable apartment provided by a friend. However, when his benefactor goes missing, Wladyslaw is left to fend for himself and he spends the next several years dashing from one abandoned home to another, desperate to avoid capture by German occupation troops. The Pianist was based on the memoir of the same name by the real-life Wladyslaw Szpilman; the book was first published in 1946 as Death of a City, but was banned by Polish Communist officials and went out of print until 1998, when a new edition was issued as The Pianist. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Adrien BrodyThomas Kretschmann, (more)
2001  
 
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From DVD International, the people behind Digital Video Essentials, comes Fireplace, a special DVD designed for viewers who want the experience of looking at a fireplace without the high costs and backbreaking maintenance. The images of a burning wood fireplace can be accompanied by three different audio tracks. Viewers can select from the natural crackling sounds of the fireplace: "Christmas Goes Baroque" featuring "Jingle Bells," "Silent Night," "The First Noel," "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen," and "O Tannenbaum"; or "Night Music" featuring songs from Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Pachelbel, Debussy, and Chopin. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

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1995  
 
This Hungarian fantasy moves easily from one time to the next as it almost simultaneously presents two train rides in the lifetime of a famous writer; the film is adapted from two short stories by Hungarian writer Dezso Kosztolanyi. The film opens with a scene following young aspiring writer Kornel Esti as he is chased in a train station by a woman disguised as death. The journeys begin. The first is in 1903 and follows the young Kornel as he journeys to the Italian coast. In the second, set in 1933, a middle-aged, burned out and cynical Kornel is heading to Germany to give a guest lecture. Upon both trips, Kornel encounters the same characters. In the first, Kornel is sexually initiated by an enigmatic blonde, meets a pretty woman and her gangly daughter who steals a kiss from the young writer, and has a brief fling with a waitress in a hayloft. In his later years he sees the same characters through jaded, disillusioned eyes. He is oppressed by thoughts of his own cowardly nature. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1994  
 
This German fantasy follows a young man's quest to understand his bizarre childhood. Much of the film was shot on location in Italy. Daniel has returned to his hometown in Italy with Clara, his lover, for a romantic vacation. Clara is disturbed by Daniel's recently strange behavior which includes sneaking into the estate of Coppola, an enigmatic business Tycoon. Daniel's father was killed in an industrial accident at the company Coppola owned. His flashbacks seem to have lead him to the estate. There Daniel becomes obsessed with Coppola's gorgeous, but remote daughter Olimpia who wafts around the estate wearing slinky lingerie. After Daniel's double obsession shows no sign of waning Clara gets angry and returns to Venice. Daniel finally gets close to Olimpia only to discover that she is a sophisticated robot produced at Coppola's factory--the factory where Daniel's daddy died. Now Daniel is determined to discover Olimpia's inner workings, and kill the obviously demented Coppola. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Lorenzo FlahertyStella Vordemann, (more)
1991  
 
In this frequently surrealistic romp, a satire on sex, politics, and the business of filmmaking, two young women get together after discovering sufficient provocations in their lives to deliberately set out to wreak havoc in the world around them. Joelle (Anouk Grinberg) has just been thrown out of a moving car by her abusive man-friend, when Camille (Charlotte Gainsbourg) encounters her. Joelle's bitter exclamation Merci la Vie, or "thank you, life" echoes something of Camille's feelings, and the two decide to go on a rampage, picking up and seducing numerous men and then doing things like destroying their cars. Eventually, they set their sights on a "higher" goal and decide to do in an entire town. Meanwhile, it becomes evident that a sinister medical researcher, Dr. Worms (Gérard Depardieu), has infected promiscuous Joelle with a sexually transmitted disease he invented for the sole purpose of becoming the man who finds its cure, which he hopes will make him beloved, famous and rich. At some point, an elaborate series of flashbacks enter the story, and in one sequence, Camille attempts to persuade her feuding parents to get back together long enough to conceive her. Reviewers noted that logic is not a strong point in this film, but they found its fast pace and bright performances vastly entertaining. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Charlotte GainsbourgAnouk Grinberg, (more)
1991  
 
On a summer day of 1846, George Sand hosts a large party at her country house in Nohant. Among the celebrities present are the painter Eugene Delacroix, the opera singer Pauline Viardot, and Viardot's lover, the Russian writer Ivan Turgenev. As Sand's longtime affair with composer Frederick Chopin is close to an end, Sand's daughter Solange tries to use the situation to win the heart of the ailing musical genius. Filmmaker Andrzej Zulawski irreverently depicted his famous characters as shallow, petty, selfish opportunists, while Chopin is portrayed as a tragic, misunderstood genius. Ultimately a story about destiny, the film seems a personal reflection of Zulawski's experiences, for both he and Chopin were Polish expatriates in France. The film is highly theatrical and occasionally hilarious, but despite its ups and downs, the movie's highlight is Chopin's music, brilliantly performed by Polish pianist Janusz Olejniczak. ~ Yuri German, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Janusz OlejniczakMarie-France Pisier, (more)
1990  
R  
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This hard-boiled throwback to the film noir dramas of the 1940s and '50s is directed by filmmaker and actor Dennis Hopper, based on the novel Hell Hath No Fury by Charles Williams. Don Johnson stars as Harry Madox, a drifter who settles in a small Texas town and begins secretly setting small fires, setting up his planned heist of the local bank run by eccentric Julian Ward (Jack Nance). To pay the bills while he puts his robbery scheme in motion, Harry gets a job working at a used car lot owned by the ailing George Harshaw (Jerry Hardin), whose promiscuous vamp of a wife, Dolly (Virginia Madsen), immediately begins a torrid affair with Harry. Harry's also powerfully attracted to the gorgeous Gloria Harper (Jennifer Connelly), an innocent, virginal secretary at the car dealership with a dark secret involving a creepy blackmailer, Frank Sutton (William Sadler). The Hot Spot also stars Charles Martin Smith, Barry Corbin, and Leon Rippy. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Don JohnsonVirginia Madsen, (more)
1990  
PG13  
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Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin, better known in the literary world as George Sand, not only took a man's name, but trotted around wearing pants and smoking cigars in public. No great shakes today, but in the 1800s she was perhaps the most famous (or infamous) woman in the world. One of the first original celebrities, aside from her garb and literary output, she was known to inspire many duels and broken hearts among other famous hedonist artists. One character describes her in Impromptu, as "that graveyard." The film engages in a sexual roundelay among Sand's (Judy Davis) many friends -- Eugene Delacroix (Ralph Brown), Alfred DeMusset (Mandy Patinkin), Franz Liszt (Julian Sands), and Frederick Chopin (Hugh Grant). The entire crew heads off to the summer estate of the Duke and Duchess d'Antan (Anton Rodgers and Emma Thompson), invited there by the culture-vulture hosts. Sand takes a bead on the sickly Chopin and spends her time throwing herself at him. Also on hand is Liszt's mistress Marie d'Agoult (Bernadette Peters) and Felicien Mallefille (Georges Corraface), Sand's recently jilted lover. Mallefille is jealous of any of the other guests who glance in Sand's direction and continually challenges them to duels. Marie, on the other hand, is enlisted by Sand to deliver a note to Chopin. But Marie, jealous of Sand, delivers the note substituting her name for Sand's. And as the weekend continues, the sexual merry-go-round continues at full tilt. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Judy DavisHugh Grant, (more)

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