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Freud, passions secrètes

Original title: Freud
  • 1962
  • Approved
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
Montgomery Clift, Susan Kohner, Larry Parks, and Susannah York in Freud, passions secrètes (1962)
An examination of Czech-Austrian psychologist Sigmund Freud's career when he began to treat patients diagnosed with hysteria, using the radical technique of hypnosis.
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An examination of Czech-Austrian psychologist Sigmund Freud's career when he began to treat patients diagnosed with hysteria, using the radical technique of hypnosis.An examination of Czech-Austrian psychologist Sigmund Freud's career when he began to treat patients diagnosed with hysteria, using the radical technique of hypnosis.An examination of Czech-Austrian psychologist Sigmund Freud's career when he began to treat patients diagnosed with hysteria, using the radical technique of hypnosis.

  • Director
    • John Huston
  • Writers
    • Charles Kaufman
    • Wolfgang Reinhardt
    • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Stars
    • Montgomery Clift
    • Susannah York
    • Larry Parks
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    3.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Huston
    • Writers
      • Charles Kaufman
      • Wolfgang Reinhardt
      • Jean-Paul Sartre
    • Stars
      • Montgomery Clift
      • Susannah York
      • Larry Parks
    • 31User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 9 nominations total

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    Photos13

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    Top cast42

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    Montgomery Clift
    Montgomery Clift
    • Sigmund Freud
    Susannah York
    Susannah York
    • Cecily Koertner
    Larry Parks
    Larry Parks
    • Dr. Joseph Breuer
    Susan Kohner
    Susan Kohner
    • Martha Freud
    Eileen Herlie
    Eileen Herlie
    • Frau Ida Koertner
    Fernand Ledoux
    Fernand Ledoux
    • Dr. Charcot
    David McCallum
    David McCallum
    • Carl von Schlosser
    Rosalie Crutchley
    Rosalie Crutchley
    • Frau Amalia Freud
    David Kossoff
    David Kossoff
    • Jacob Freud
    Joseph Fürst
    Joseph Fürst
    • Herr Jacob Koertner
    • (as Joseph Furst)
    Alexander Mango
    • Babinsky
    Leonard Sachs
    Leonard Sachs
    • Brouhardier
    Eric Portman
    Eric Portman
    • Dr. Theodore Meynert
    Ol Abdou
      Manfred Andrae
      • Student Doctor
      • (uncredited)
      Victor Beaumont
      Victor Beaumont
      • Dr. Guber
      • (uncredited)
      S. Brecht
        Allan Cuthbertson
        Allan Cuthbertson
        • Wilkie, Student in Paris
        • (uncredited)
        • Director
          • John Huston
        • Writers
          • Charles Kaufman
          • Wolfgang Reinhardt
          • Jean-Paul Sartre
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews31

        7.23.6K
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        Featured reviews

        8tomsview

        Revealing our inner Norman Bates

        Hypnosis, hysteria, moody B/W photography, beards and a haunted Montgomery Clift combine in a fascinating movie.

        I have seen this film a few times and each time I appreciate it a little more. It concentrates on the years in Sigmund Freud's life around 1890 when he made his groundbreaking studies on the nature of sexuality.

        Although I had the impression Freud was more of a solo act, the film shows that after a falling out with the head of the Vienna Hospital, Dr. Theodore Meynert (Eric Portman), friend and mentor Dr. Joseph Breuer (Larry Parks) played a big role in his discoveries.

        As Freud deals with one intriguing case after another, he encounters Cecily Koertner, played by a sexy Susannah York, who has a disturbing father hang-up and enough problems for a battalion of pioneering psychiatrists. This was relatively early in Susannah's career and she just about steals the show. Sadly she is gone now, a bit young at 72.

        Montgomery Clift's performance has a quality of suffering that he didn't have to fake. Director John Huston pieced together Clift's performance because the actor's life was pretty well out of control by this stage. However, a recent documentary, "Making Montgomery Clift", gives another side to the story with more blame levelled at Huston for the problematic production. That aside, what a presence Monty still had, he was probably the only actor who ever remotely intimidated Brando.

        Insights come when Freud deals with the troubled Carl von Schlossen who has savagely attacked his father. Schlossen was played by David McCallum a few years before "Man from Uncle" fame. When Freud deduces the attack was over the younger Schlossen's jealousy of his mother, Freud is shocked into the realisation that his own infantile feelings for his mother may well have gone beyond love of her strudel.

        Huston approached all this as a mystery thriller, especially when the treatment of Cecily reveals to Freud that just about all repressed emotional disturbances are based on conflicted feelings toward mum and dad.

        Jerry Goldsmith's score helps drive the film; it's as atonal as they come, but it grows on you. Again, like many of the stars, it was early in the career of the great film maestro.

        The film mixes in dream sequences with plenty of symbolism reminiscent of the films of Ingmar Bergman. In fact the whole thing has a Bergmanesque quality. And talk about the id and the ego, John Huston delivers God-like narration at key points.

        Huston made many great films as well as a couple of duds, however "Freud" was a bold idea; it's challenging, but beautifully made and deserves to be ranked among his best.
        vic-12

        MEMORABLE!

        I saw this film 40 years ago and see that no VHS is available,

        which is a pity. It is much better than "The Young Freud" which has

        recently been showing on PBS. It captures in some depth the

        creativity and uniqueness of Freud's early discoveries, which were

        amplified by him and others throughout the 20th century and into

        the 21st. We see him doggedly and devotedly looking for the root

        causes of a psychological illness which masqueraded as a

        physical (neurological) illness for centuries. His discoveries,

        stemming from this time, have greatly influenced modern thinking,

        such that we call our times "The Age of Anxiety." They have led to

        the appreciation of childhood sexuality and abuse and have taken

        psychological abuse out from under the carpet, where these

        pivotal events have been hidden for centuries. Freud was able to

        see the classic appeal of the Greek tragedies and interpret why

        they retain their power and are performed today, 3000 years later!
        8scgary66

        excellent bio by Huston

        Huston does very good work here, using a fine script in presenting the story of Freud not as a standard biography, but concentrating only on his initial work in examining the effect of the subconscious mind on conscious (though perhaps involuntary) actions - an idea believed preposterous at the time. The narrative is presented essentially as a psychological detective story, as Freud tries to discover the root causes of one patient's multiple afflictions and aberrant behavior, none of which has any physical cause. The film uses depictions of memories, dreams, thoughts as visual clues - all progressively revealing more - to lead us (and Freud) steadily closer to the underlying truth in the case, as well as in other areas disturbing him.

        The opening and closing narration (by Huston) is effective, though the occasional narration he does as the story progresses bothered me a little; it was as if they felt there was something missing from the film which had to be explained in voiceover, and it also pulled me out of the story momentarily. Probably it would have been more effective if Clift (rather than Huston) had done the narration, from Freud's point of view, in the body of the film.

        The film, which maintains a serious, fiercely somber atmosphere throughout (similar to The Elephant Man though perhaps more so here), does not proceed with any real speed - you'll need to stay with it; and the dark, harsh style of photography and music (while effective) might be difficult for some viewers. You need not agree with Freud's concluding theories (many of which are not held in particularly high regard today) in order to recognize the importance and validity of his primary methods and pioneering work in what was then a highly ridiculed field. 8 of 10
        hootson21

        What happened to the dream scene?

        What happened to the dream scene? This film is now at long last available on DVD. Unfortunately this new DVD version is still missing the dream scene that I clearly remember seeing on the films cinema release back in 1962. It occurs when Freud can't follow his fathers funeral into the cemetery. Instead he faints and then we are plunged into his famous dream - the one about "the eyes shall be closed". (Freud recounts it I believe in The Interpretation of Dreams). In the film the only remnant of the dream remaining is a night time shot of noisy train pulling out of a railway station. Thats the tail end of the dream for anybody wondering what it is. Then Freud describes to Breur what the dream was about. Why this scene is repeatedly cut from the few bootleg versions available and now the new DVD version I have no idea. Its a pity because like the other dreams in the film it was impressively filmed by Huston.
        mermatt

        Atmospheric bio-flick

        John Huston does a great job telling the story of Freud's discovery of the subconscious and the Oedipus complex -- and turning the plot into a mystery -detective story.

        Clift gives a sobering, troubled performance as Freud -- perhaps because Clift, like Freud, was haunted by his own demons.

        The film is in black and white which is very effective, especially in the night and dream sequences. The music and atmosphere suggest vintage TWILIGHT ZONE. This is a fascinating film which reveals Freud in a new light and makes us look at ourselves also in a new light.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          Jean-Paul Sartre wrote the original script at the request of director John Huston, but it was unused as it was too long. Many key elements from Jean-Paul Sartre's script survive in the finished film, such as the creation of the composite patient Cecily, who combines features of Freud's patients Anna O., Elisabeth von R., Dora, and others. After Sartre's death, his screenplay was published separately as "The Freud Scenario."
        • Quotes

          Narrator: Since ancient times there have been three great changes in man's idea of himself. Three major blows dealt us in our vanity. Before Copernicus, we thought we were the centre of the universe, that all the heavenly bodies revolved around our Earth. But the great astronomer shattered that conceit and we were forced to admit our planet is but one of many which swing around the sun, that there are other systems beyond our solar system in myriad worlds. Before Charles Darwin man believed he was a species unto himself separate and apart from the animal kingdom. But the great biologist made us see that our physical organism is the product of a vast evolutionary process whose laws are no different for us than for any other form of animal life. Before Sigmund Freud, man believed that what he said and did were the products of his conscious will alone. But the great psychologist demonstrate the existence of another part of our mind, which functions in darkest secrecy and can even rule our lives. This is the story of Freud's descent into a region almost as black as hell itself: Man's unconscious, and how he let in the light.

        • Alternate versions
          Originally prepared at 140 minutes; cut to 120 minutes for theatrical release. Some older TV prints still use the cut version; full-length version is now available on DVD in the UK (as of 2015 there has been no domestic Region 1 DVD release.)
        • Connections
          Featured in Discovering Huston (2012)

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • June 3, 1964 (France)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • Freud
        • Filming locations
          • Bavaria Studios, Bavariafilmplatz 7, Geiselgasteig, Grünwald, Bavaria, Germany
        • Production company
          • Bavaria Film
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Budget
          • $4,000,000 (estimated)
        • Gross worldwide
          • $6,388
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          2 hours 20 minutes
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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