Night Train to Lisbon (film)
Night Train to Lisbon | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Bille August |
Produced by |
|
Written by |
|
Based on |
Night Train to Lisbon by Pascal Mercier |
Starring | Jeremy Irons |
Music by | Annette Focks |
Cinematography | Filip Zumbrunn |
Edited by | Hansjörg Weißbrich |
Production company |
|
Distributed by | Lusomundo |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 111 minutes |
Country |
|
Language | English |
Night Train to Lisbon is a 2013 drama film directed by Bille August and starring Jeremy Irons. Based on the novel Night Train to Lisbon (2004) by Pascal Mercier and written by Greg Latter and Ulrich Herrmann, the film is about a Swiss teacher who saves the life of a woman and then abandons his teaching career and reserved life to embark on a thrilling intellectual adventure that takes him on a journey to the very heart of himself.[1] The film premiered out of competition at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival.[2]
Plot
Walking over a bridge in Bern, Raimund Gregorius, a Swiss professor of ancient languages, notices a young woman in a red coat standing on the railing, about to leap. Dropping his briefcase, he runs and pulls her down. She helps him gather the papers that have spilled from his briefcase and accompanies him to the school where he teaches. But instead of waiting to talk, she leaves during the middle of his class, without her coat.
Concerned, Raimund grabs the coat and runs after her, but in vain. He checks her pockets for identification. All he finds is a small book, a memoir of sorts, by Amadeu do Prado. It is stamped with the address of the bookstore, so he goes there. The bookseller remembers the girl's purchasing this obscure book and, as he leafs through it, a train ticket to Lisbon falls out. The train is, in fact, leaving in 15 minutes. Confused and doubtful, Raimund rushes to the station, but the woman is nowhere in sight. At the last moment he decides to use the ticket himself, and during the journey he reads the book.
Amadeu do Prado lived in Lisbon, so Raimund searches for him, hoping that this will lead to the woman. He finds Amadeu's home, where the writer's sister, Adriana, welcomes Raimund; she gives the impression her brother still lives there. Raimund learns that Amadeu was a doctor, and that only 100 copies of his book were printed. When Raimund asks what happened to their father, Adriana's reaction is hostile. As Raimund is leaving, the maid informs him that he can find Amadeu in the town's cemetery. Raimund finds the tomb: Amadeu died in 1974.
In the street, a bicyclist runs into Raimund and smashes his glasses. While obtaining new glasses from a local optician, Mariana, Raimund narrates his experiences. When he returns to collect the glasses, Mariana tells Raimund her uncle knew Amadeu de Prado well and is willing to talk to Raimund.
Raimund and Mariana both go to the nursing home where her uncle João Eça resides, and Raimund learns João and Amadeu were both in the resistance against the Salazar dictatorship, which story is told in continuing flashbacks as the film continues. Raimund then visits the priest who taught and later buried Amadeu de Prado. The priest explains that Amadeu, a smart young boy from an aristocratic background, befriended Jorge O'Kelly, another bright boy in the school though of lowly means. The boys bonded through their love for knowledge, particularly the philosophical and political knowledge not permitted under Salazar. Amadeu gave a graduation speech that reflected his contempt for the regime, much to the chagrin of his father, a well respected judge.
Raimund returns to Adriana and asks for her side of the story, and then he revisits João to obtain more information. Raimund learns that Amadeu died of an aneurysm, which he knew he had, but had not told Adriana about. As a doctor, Amadeu never refused a patient, and when Mendez, a powerful member of the Salazar regime, called "the Butcher of Lisbon", was brought to Amadeu's clinic, he saved the man's life. Amadeu's friends were shocked by this, especially Jorge, who at that time was already in the resistance. Later, Amadeu confronted Jorge and declared that he too would join the resistance. Jorge introduced Amadeu to João and to Estefânia, a beautiful woman who helped the resistance by memorizing people's names and contact information, and whom they were both attracted to. When the revolution against Salazar began, Amadeu was able to smuggle Estefânia to safety in Spain. Raimund learned where she went and went there to see that she was still alive.
Raimund finally meets the woman from the bridge again, in Lisbon; she had felt suicidal because she had just learned from the book that her beloved grandfather was the Butcher of Lisbon, but she is learning to accept this.
The events become a catalyst to Raimund's life, in a gentle sort of way. He informs the school that he is now returning to his job. Mariana goes to the railway station with him and, at the last moment, suggests he could instead stay.
Cast
- Jeremy Irons as Raimund Gregorius
- Mélanie Laurent as young Estefânia
- Jack Huston as Amadeu do Prado
- Martina Gedeck as Mariana
- Bruno Ganz as older Jorge O'Kelly
- Christopher Lee as older Father Bartolomeu
- Lena Olin as older Estefânia
- Charlotte Rampling as older Adriana do Prado
- Tom Courtenay as older João Eça
- Marco d'Almeida as young João Eça
- August Diehl as young Jorge O'Kelly
- Beatriz Batarda as young Adriana do Prado
- Burghart Klaußner as Judge Prado
- Filipe Vargas as young Father Bartolomeu
- Adriano Luz as Rui Luís Mendes, the Butcher of Lisbon
Reception
The Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney wrote: Bille August's direction was caught in "an outmoded storytelling approach" where "key events" remained "hopelessly page-bound",[3] while Variety's Boyd van Hoeij called the film "a relic", just "waffly rather than talky and entirely devoid of tension."[4]
References
- ↑ "Bille August boards 'Night Train'". Retrieved 11 May 2010.
- ↑ "Berlinale 2013: Competition Now Complete". berlinale. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ↑ "Night Train to Lisbon: Berlin Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
- ↑ "'Night Train to Lisbon' review". Variety. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
External links
- Night Train to Lisbon Official website
- Night Train to Lisbon at the Internet Movie Database
- Night Train to Lisbon at Rotten Tomatoes
|