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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Info Post

I was really interested in this movie, do you remember? (My previous post) Fortunately, many of the movies shown at Venice Film Festival 2011 have got to Rome and are being shown these days in a few of the central theatres. My friend K/V and I were lucky enough to get two tickets for "A Dangerous Method". Actually,  she queued up under the sun in a hot summer afternoon to get them. I simply took  a bus, an underground train and joined her. So kudos to her for discovering it was on and bravely facing the hot and the queue. Was it worth every single drop of sweat? Well, I'm glad I was there in Rome last night, in that crowded movie theatre in Via delle Quattro Fontane: I'm also proud I saw this film and I can tell you about it. Did I like it? Go on reading and judge yourself.  I can tell you what I was not. Disappointed.

A Dangerous Method starring Keira Knightley, Michael Fassbender , Viggo Mortensen  and Vincent Cassel is an intense,  thought-provoking, deep analysis of the relationship between young  Carl Jung (Fassbender)  and his mentor, Sigmund Freud (Mortensen) . The relationship between the two men , little by little, comes to a clash, also due to the difficult,  fascinating case of  a beuatiful woman, a Russian Jew, Sabina Spilrein (Keira Knightley, who doesn't play the ingenue giggling all the time for once) , whom Dr Jung meets as an inmate at his hospital. The young woman's been driven mad by a violent father and has developed hysteria and psychosis. The woman is endowed with  a  brilliant brain and dreams of becoming a doctor. This is what Jung will help her to become.


The reason of Jung and Freud's  difficult relationship is also based on their different views on psychoanalisis. Freud thinks Jung's line of analysis is too influenced by supposition and coincidence. Jung, for his part, thinks his master has sex on the brain. Their paths must inevitably part, in the end.  
This film is  a new occasion for its director, David Cronenbergalso known as the King of Venereal Horror or the Baron of blood -   to dig into human beings and their truest side, their subconscious, the hidden side. Cronenberg seems actually devoted to discover and depict the complexity of  human beings with their fears, neurosis, violent instincts and obsessions (Crash, A  History of Violence, Eastern Promises). 
Beside the famous pair of psychiatrists,  forcefully acted by Fassbender and Mortensen, the two female characters, Sabina Spielrein and Jung's wife Emma (Sarah Gadon)  ,  are strong and brave and so much less hypocritical then the male figures. They seem the ones who lead the game, actually. 
All the characters talk much about freedom and long for it, but it remains a truly difficult goal to achieve for all of them. Jung is caught prisoner in his web of proud certainties and struggles against his longings, wishes, desires, instincts and feelings. He is an ambition - driven man who seems quite incapable of real affection. 
He idolised Freud but then, meeting him, he gets to destroy the authorative image he had built in his  mind. He doesn't want to renounce his personal beliefs in favour of Freud's. 
Freud too seems rather  self - focused and proud,  he too seems incapable of true feelings of generosity or friendship. 
This is why the two women come out as real brave heroines. They are first of all generous . Sabina in her passionate surrender to her saviour, Emma by trying to give her uncaring husband what she thinks could make him happy: a solid family, an heir or a boat . They show their fragilities without compromise, they sacrifice their pride for love.

Finally, Vincent Cassel  gives a brilliant  performance as Otto Gross. He should be cured by Dr Jung but ends up helping him,  instead, to free his real self.  Otto Gross is a champion of anti-psychiatry and sexual liberation, he also developed an anarchist form of depth psychology (which rejected the civilising necessity of psychological repression proposed by Freud) and abused drugs like cocain. He really was a patient Jung treated more as a colleague and who betrayed his trust escaping from the hospital.
On the whole I found this film very interesting, thought provoking and deep, though lacking the sparkle who usually enlighten my sympathy for the men and women in the stories. Everything was ... well made: well written, well acted, well directed, well shot . Then beautiful photography, costumes and locations. What it lacked was... the sparkle. I mean,  overwhelming emotions. Yet all the suffering narrated, those painful stories told should have conveyed some. Freud will forgive me  if I say ... beautiful but  frigid.



P.S. It's Fassbender's magic moment! He won as Best Actor at Venice Film Festival with Shame, he was there  also as Jung in A Dangerous Method, he is the latest Mr Rochester on the big screen in the UK these days and coming soon to Italy, too (Jane Eyre 2011).

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