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My Mother's Castle by Yves Robert
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Product detailsActor: Didier Pain, Julien Ciamaca, Nathalie Roussel, Philippe Caub?re, Th?r?se Liotard Director: Yves Robert Edition: VHS Tape Audio: German (Original Language) Format: PAL Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
VHS Movie Reviews of My Mother's CastleMovie Review: and the greatest of these is Love. Summary: 5 StarsAmongst all the "bleak"," hard-hitting", "unflinchingly honest" "unrelenting realism" with which we are confronted in the name of so much art-house cinema, this film (together with its predecessor My Father's Glory) offers something precious, something we lose in transit to adulthood. For in each one of us the secret garden, the summer holiday, the opening of presents, the kitchen of warm community longs to be found again. Its there, but we in jaded sophistication and disillusion have lost the key.
Having a key to a door along the canal which would afford their luggage-laden family an illicit short-cut en-route to their holiday house, and all the attendant moral dilemmas for a strict middle-class family is the ostensible subject-matter of the film. Not much, a trivial bourgeois episode, rendered for maximum sentimental effect says the cynic inside. Yes. Until your eyes involuntary begin to follow the limpid flow of water in the canal, until the landscape of Provence takes you in, and you find yourself a guest at their table in a lavender dusk. With the whole expanse of childhood waiting to be explored in the morning.
At the end of the film the cold, real world is acknowledged, but reluctantly, hurriedly like an unpleasant aftertaste. Time passes and death closes in on us all, encloses us from all. But in an act of defiance the adult Marcel literally breaks down the door central to the film, the source of anguish. Love, it is hinted, will prevail, and restore.
See this film to be made young again. Even if only as fleetingly as water flowing away.
Louis M
Movie Review: second best movie ever made Summary: 5 StarsThe first best movie ever made is the one preceding this, "My Father's Glory" (La Gloire de Mon Pere) by the same production company a few years earlier. "Le Chateau de Ma Mere" is the sequel. This one has the same superb production values, the same actors, etc. It stands alone as a wonderful story of growing up in Southern France 100 years ago. However, seen AFTER the first one, it is even better. We care deeply about these people,and having met them before, the true-life events that befall them are very moving.
The movie ends with a brilliant circularity that makes you draw your breath.
I saw the movies before reading the books, and the films are very true to the books. In fact, having seen the films first, the faces and voices of the actors and the striking scenery filled my imagination.
Movie Review: Simply Beautiful! Summary: 5 StarsSet in belle Provence at the turn of the century, this lovely film shows a year in the life of a young boy, his schoolteacher father, younger brother, baby sister and precious mother. The story is simple and charming, the actors are natural and engaging and the scenery is to-die-for. The French have a way of showing the incredible beauty of daily life that makes you want to get your passport renewed and start packing.
See you there!
Movie Review: a beautiful and heartfelt sequel to LA GLOIRE DE MON PERE (MY FATHER'S GLORY)....... Summary: 5 StarsI first saw this sequel many years ago in French class and it was probably one of the most beautiful pieces of poetry set to film that I had ever seen. For those of you unfamiliar with the first in this two part film series, I really reccomend that you watch LA GLOIRE DE MON PERE (MY FATHER'S GLORY) before seeing LE CHATEAU DE MA MERE (MY MOTHER'S CASTLE). This second part is based on the teen years of writer Marcel Pagnol and some of the most profound memories he had from that time of his life. It follows him, his family and the people who cross his path along the way. We see the triumphs and the tragedies and all incidents are depicted with grace and beauty (even when they are the most painful to watch). Everything from the separation that occurs between parent and child to childhood crushes are shown in a very natural and believable way. What's more, the cinematography just makes the scenes soar. Some of the sequences appear as if out of a luscious landscape painting. Whether you are a Francophile or someone new to foreign film, I highly reccomend this.
Movie Review: Very Appealing Summary: 5 StarsThis was the follow-up to "My Father's Glory." That film probably better known but I much prefer this second film. To me, this one is far more appealing.
The scenery, the color, the sweet, beautiful face of Nathalie Roussel and the gentle tone of the film all make it a winner. The French countryside pictured here is beautiful as we watch a family make trips through various gates en route to their destination. Some of it actually gets suspenseful. It's a very simple story but nicely. The pre-teen romance is a bit distracting but it doesn't go on long.
The movie features good storytelling and I never get tired of the pleasing visuals. As mentioned, this story has a lot of appeal.
Summary of My Mother's CastleThe second part of Yves Robert's filming of Marcel Pagnol's childhood memoirs completes the narrative so casually begun in My Father's Glory--and fulfills a radiant journey we hadn't even realized we'd embarked on. Marcel is approaching his teens and acquiring a more coherent sense of the world. Accordingly, My Mother's Castle boasts a more concentrated style and unspools its story over (mostly) the space of one year, as opposed to a dozen. Whereas in the first film Robert had worked entirely with little-known players who simply became Marcel's family, here he calls upon screen veterans Jean Rochefort, Jean Carmet, and Georges Wilson to flesh out sharply ironical figures who loom challengingly on the young man's horizon. Consistent with Pagnol's emphasis on Proven?al locations, the focal event of the film becomes the weekly walk the Marseilles-based family makes from the trolley station to their remote country cottage--a quintessentially mundane ritual that comes to be fraught with wonder, delight, and terror. It all leads to a payoff that opens the meaning of the title only as the film is reaching its transcendent conclusion. --Richard T. Jameson
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