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Franz Schubert Movies

During Schubert's brief lifetime, it was all the rage in Austrian society to have an entire evening's salon, a so-called "Schubertaiad," at one's home devoted entirely to the composer's songs and instrumental works. Today, apart from concerts, both appear in approximately 130 films. The instrumental music occurs most often because the songs have such rich dramatic or lyrical characters that attention is naturally drawn to them. However, the one song that is often used precisely because of its strong "motivated" presence is the composer's instantly recognizable setting of the Ave Maria. The song itself was the subject of a short by the noted French director Max Ophüls in 1936. In the musical comedy It's a Date (1940), Deanna Durbin tries out for the part of St. Anne by singing the tune. There is a lovely interpretation in the Disney classic Fantasia (1940) that combines religious and nature imagery. In a wholly different adaptation, the supernatural film Needful Things (1993), based on Stephen King's novel, Ave Maria is contrasted with the presence of a demonic shopkeeper who is causing the populace of a small town to turn against each other. In a satirical usage, television's animated South Park quotes the beginning of the song after the townspeople have just eaten an actor (a cartoon version of Eric Roberts), thinking they have been trapped by a storm, and, after only a few hours, are starving. This song appears in its standard religious context in the Miguel Torres-directed Reina de Reinas (The Queen of Queens, 1948, aka La Vírgen María), and in Serenade (1956) starring the legendary tenor Mario Lanza.
Other Schubert songs enhance Leise Flehen Meine Lieder (1933) (Ständchen and Sag' mir immer wieder), The Song of Songs (1933) (Heidenröslein), and Sammy and Rosie Get Laid (1987) (Der Erlkoenig).
Schubert's famous "unfinished" Symphony No. 8 often accompanies mysteries of various kinds, from the tension-filled classic Dracula (1931), to the brilliant Double Indemnity (1944) (which employs perfectly integrated classical selections), to Escalier C (Staircase C [1985] which also quotes the often cited Trout Quartet, also heard in Brainstorm [1983] and High and Low [1963]). There are some comic uses of the piece, such as in the short Men of Steel (1938) and television's The Roommate (1986). The dramatic biography Unfinished Symphony (1933) (aka Lover Divine) concentrates on portraying Schubert as a man elusive to even his best friends.
Various piano sonatas, impromptus, fantasias, and waltzes occur in Isadora (1968), El Desencanto (The Disenchantment, 1976), The Europeans (1979), A Room With a View (1986), Madame Sousatzka (1988), the sci-fi thriller Gattaca (1997), La Lettre (1999), and Le Goût des autres (The Taste of Others, 1999). The Finnish short M.A. Numminen Meets Schubert (1996) celebrates Schubert's bicentennial. His string quartet Death and the Maiden provided the title for the thought-provoking 1994 political thriller, and the composer's music maintains a constant television presence with the theme song to the series Wings (1990). ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, Rovi
2009  
 
Adapted from the novel Chemin Venel by Martine Chevalier, and written and directed for the stage by François Dupeyron, the musical drama Conversations à Rechlin emerged as a 2009 co-production of the Grand Théâtre de Genève and Les Films en Hiver. Set in Europe circa 1944, with the final act of World War II and the fall of the Reich just around the corner, the tale depicts three wholly different Europeans drawn together by a regular ritual that enables them to surmount their individual differences. Marie-Claude Chappuis stars, performing lieder by Robert Schumann, Franz Schubert and Hugo Wolf that the writer-director and producers use in contrast to the plight of the prisoners in the labor camp at Rechlin. The cast also features Nicolas Brieger. Concert pianist Inna Petcheniouk provides additional musical accompaniment; Gilles Lambert designed the sets, and Carmel Peritore created the costumes. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Inna Petcheniouk
 
 
2006  
 
After achieving international recognition in the 1950's with such films as Det Sjunde Inseglet (aka The Seventh Seal), Smultronstället (aka Wild Strawberries) and Sommarnattens Leende (aka Smiles of a Summer Night), Ingmar Berman became one of the world's best known filmmakers for his emotionally intense portraits of souls in crisis, but the man himself developed a reputation for zealously guarding his privacy throughout his long and distinguished career. In 2004, Bergman sat for a series of interviews with filmmaker Marie Nyreroed, a longtime friend and confidant, for a documentary produced for Swedish television, and the results became Bergman Complete, a three-part series which explored the man and his work in depth. The first segment focuses on Bergman's life as a filmmaker, as he discusses his best-known pictures and his working methods. Part two concentrates on Bergman's lesser-known career in the theater, which he rates higher than his work in the cinema, and features reminiscences from actor Erland Josephson. In the final chapter, Bergman invites the filmmakers into his home on Faro Island and talks about his private life, including his hobbies, the emotions that drive his work, and his personal weaknesses. After receiving its premiere on Swedish television, Bergman Complete played at a number of international film festivals, including the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2004  
 
Add H6: Diary of a Serial Killer to Queue Add H6: Diary of a Serial Killer to top of Queue  
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, Rovi

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Starring:
Fernando AcasoMaria Jose Bausa, (more)
 
2004  
 
Add Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 1 to Queue Add 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 Collar, Rovi

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Starring:
Heinz WallbergTamara Lund, (more)
 
2003  
 
Add Classic Archive: Teresa Berganza to Queue Add Classic Archive: Teresa Berganza to top of Queue  
Classic Archive: Teresa Berganza features the renowned soprano performing pieces by a variety of composers including Mozart, Rossini, Schubert, and Donizetti. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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2002  
 
Several religious songs are performed by the renowned Choir of St. John's College in this concert release from Alpha Centauri Entertainment. Choir of St. John's College, Cambridge: Ave Verum - Popular Choral Classics includes renditions of Haydn's "Insanae et vanae curae," Rachmaninov's "Hymn of the Cherubim," and many others. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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Starring:
Christopher RobinsonPeter Davis, (more)
 
1998  
 
Add Jose Carreras: The Sacred Concert to Queue Add Jose Carreras: The Sacred Concert to top of Queue  
This program features the beloved tenor offering a variety of sacred songs during an Easter concert in 1998. Recorded live at the Basilica di Santa Maria degli Angeli in Rome, selections include compositions by Bach, Handel, Schubert, and Mozart. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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1997  
 
Add Witman Fiuk to Queue Add Witman Fiuk to top of Queue  
Outwardly Janos and Erno Witman seem like typical middle class teens, but beneath their facades of normalcy, the two are deeply disturbed and obsessed with the nature of sex and death. Leaving much to the viewer's imagination, this horrific and highly atmospheric tale begins in a small Hungarian town in 1914. The brothers live a happy, well-adjusted life until their father, a tax inspector, suddenly dies in terribly painful manner. After the funeral, Janos and Erno pay a nighttime visit to his grave and begin reflecting on death. They spy a big owl which they capture. On the way home, they find a dog tied up outside a bar and steal it. Six months pass. When their biology teacher dissects a frog in class one day, the two renew their fascination with death and begin experimenting on their pets -- their experimentation occurs off-camera. Their lives become even stranger when Janos becomes obsessed with a young prostitute. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1997  
 
Add The Double Life of Franz Schubert: An Exploration of His Life and Work to Queue Add The Double Life of Franz Schubert: An Exploration of His Life and Work to top of Queue  
Like Tchaikovsky and other classical geniuses, Franz Schubert buried a dark and somewhat disturbing lifestyle beneath a myriad of extraordinary musical accomplishments. A notorious rake, Schubert contracted such a severe case of syphilis that he endured a forced hospitalization, yet his difficult recuperation and physical suffering reportedly inspired some of his most glorious works. The documentary The Double Life of Franz Schubert: An Exploration of His Life and Work unflinchingly hones in on this period of development and growth in Schubert's life. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Simon Russell BealeJason Flemyng, (more)
 
1994  
 
The Naxos Musical Journey programs pair onscreen tours of famous cities and landmarks with the music that emerged from those locales. This particular volume journeys to the magical, snow-encrusted land of Switzerland, with its dazzling slopes and waterfalls and radiant cultural diversity. The program begins with a journey from Grindelwald to the Jungfraujoch, and a trip of Lake Thun, Trummelbach Waterfalls and The Emmental, before moving into a series of sections that roughly correspond to the country's elegant divisions into German, Italian, French and Romansch-speaking regions. The French segment travels from Geneva to Aigle, the German section glimpses farmers in the Alps, the Italian section ventures to Ascona and Bosco Gurin, and the Romansch section travels to the Santa Maria and Swiss Natural Park in Zernez. Featured on the soundtrack are two compositions by Franz Schubert: his "Unfinished Symphony" from 1822, and his "Fifth Symphony" from 1816. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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1991  
 
Add Evgeny Kissin: Plays Schubert/Brahms/Bach/Liszt to Queue Add Evgeny Kissin: Plays Schubert/Brahms/Bach/Liszt to top of Queue  
In this classical performance film, acclaimed concert pianist Evgeny Kissin interprets a series of works by Schubert, Gluck, Liszt, Bach and Brahms. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Evgeny Kissin
 
1991  
R  
This dramatic presentation is the story of the landscapes that inspired Caspar David Friedrich. Narrated by Friedrich's friend and pupil, Carl Gustav Carus (played by Helmut Griem) this takes place on location throughout Europe. Mr. Friedrich's will not appear, except with his back to the camera, as he paints. ~ Rovi

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Starring:
Helmut GriemSabine Sinjen, (more)
 
1991  
 
This travel release takes viewers on an armchair tour of Italy's great palaces, places of unique history and architecture, as well as cultural significance, such as Lienz Dolomites in Austria. The footage is set to the music of Franz Schubert. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi

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1991  
 
The classical music performance film New Year's Concert 1991 (Abbado, Wiener Philharmoniker) finds celebrated maestro Claudio Abbado - a longtime fixture of the Wiener Philharmoniker symphony in Vienna - returning to conduct that orchestra for a special New Year's Eve performance on New Year's Day, January 1, 1991. The set incorporates pieces by Johann Strauss I, Johan Strauss II, Mozart, Lanner, Schubert, Josef Strauss and Eduard Strauss. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Claudio Abbado
 
1989  
 
This quirky Portuguese comedy won a silver lion at the 1989 Venice Film Festival. The story concerns the irrepressible Joao de Deus (played by the director, Joao Cesar Monteiro), an ill-kempt, lusty and none-too-honest resident of Violeta's boarding house, which happens to have yellow walls. Joao, who has no visible means of support, is in his fifties, and is not above cadging money from his 70 year old mother, who still works as a cleaning lady. He has a wistful sort of lust for the young ladies in the boarding house, and gets a kind of thrill when he is permitted to take a bath in their used water. He strikes up a friendship with a slightly stupid girl who is a mite promiscuous, and even has a brief sexual encounter with her himself. Many slightly "off" encounters occur during the remainder of the film, but despite Joao's potentially defeating setback near the end, it appears that it won't be long before he's back in action. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
João César MonteiroManuela de Freitas, (more)