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IMDbPro

Mrs. Soffel: Révolte et passion

Original title: Mrs. Soffel
  • 1984
  • PG-13
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
Mrs. Soffel: Révolte et passion (1984)
Diane Keaton stars as a prison warden's wife who falls in love with a death row convict (Mel Gibson.) Believing he's innocent, she helps him and his convicted brother escape.
Play trailer2:23
1 Video
20 Photos
Period DramaTragic RomanceDramaRomance

Diane Keaton stars as a prison warden's wife who falls in love with a death row convict (Mel Gibson.) Believing he's innocent, she helps him and his convicted brother escape.Diane Keaton stars as a prison warden's wife who falls in love with a death row convict (Mel Gibson.) Believing he's innocent, she helps him and his convicted brother escape.Diane Keaton stars as a prison warden's wife who falls in love with a death row convict (Mel Gibson.) Believing he's innocent, she helps him and his convicted brother escape.

  • Director
    • Gillian Armstrong
  • Writer
    • Ron Nyswaner
  • Stars
    • Diane Keaton
    • Mel Gibson
    • Matthew Modine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    3.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gillian Armstrong
    • Writer
      • Ron Nyswaner
    • Stars
      • Diane Keaton
      • Mel Gibson
      • Matthew Modine
    • 33User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Trailer

    Photos20

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    Top cast70

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    Diane Keaton
    Diane Keaton
    • Kate Soffel
    Mel Gibson
    Mel Gibson
    • Ed Biddle
    Matthew Modine
    Matthew Modine
    • Jack Biddle
    Edward Herrmann
    Edward Herrmann
    • Warden Peter Soffel
    Trini Alvarado
    Trini Alvarado
    • Irene Soffel
    Jennifer Dundas
    Jennifer Dundas
    • Margaret Soffel
    • (as Jennie Dundas)
    Danny Corkill
    Danny Corkill
    • Eddie Soffel
    Harley Cross
    Harley Cross
    • Clarence Soffel
    Terry O'Quinn
    Terry O'Quinn
    • Detective Buck McGovern
    Pippa Pearthree
    Pippa Pearthree
    • Maggie
    William Youmans
    William Youmans
    • Guard George Koslow
    Maury Chaykin
    Maury Chaykin
    • Guard Charlie Reynolds
    Joyce Ebert
    • Matron Agnes Garvey
    Wayne Robson
    Wayne Robson
    • Halliday
    Dana Wheeler-Nicholson
    Dana Wheeler-Nicholson
    • Jessie Bodyne
    Les Rubie
    • Mr. Stevenson
    Paula Trueman
    Paula Trueman
    • Mrs. Stevenson
    Nancy Chesney
    • Mrs. Fitzgerald
    • Director
      • Gillian Armstrong
    • Writer
      • Ron Nyswaner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    6.13.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8ecjones1951

    Ignored, overlooked, forgotten. And why?

    "Mrs. Soffel" is a wonderful movie I have seen many times, but the last viewing was so many years ago I'm watching it right now on TCM.

    I'm a sucker for movies whose main characters suddenly, inexplicably make a decision which goes against everything they seem to embody, or at least that which the viewer has come to know about them. That Kate Soffel's story is a true one makes it all the more intriguing.

    In early 20th-century America, the lot of a wife, even that of a well-to-do-man and mother to lovely children, was a lonely, empty, barren existence. In a wealthy household with servants, there was very little meaningful work for the mistress of the house to do every day.

    Even the layers upon layers of clothes Victorian women wore served no practical purpose except to restrict movement and render their wearers merely decorative. Express your opinions and you got packed off to visit relatives in hopes that maybe the change of scenery would "do you good." There were millions of avenues for creative expression and enterprise that were simply cut off for women.

    Good minds went to waste. Souls shriveled and died.

    Kate Soffel (Diane Keaton) was the wife of a prison warden in Pittsburgh at the turn of the last century. She served as something of a missionary to the prisoners, giving them Bibles, holding prayer readings with them and hoping to guide them towards remorse and redemption. She never expects to fall in love with one of the inmates. But fall she does, for the charming Ed Biddle (Mel Gibson), who along with his brother Jack, (Matthew Modine) are in jail on murder charges.

    Kate is suffocating; the Biddles are desperate. Prone to fits of melancholy and depression, plagued with fears that she is not a good mother and that she has failed her husband -- whom she has come to learn she really doesn't know very well -- Kate, like so many women of her era, is desperate for something to end the tedium, the frustration, the despair. She is a perfect candidate for the dangerous voyage she helps plan and sets out on with the Biddle brothers.

    "Mrs. Soffel" raises many ethical and moral issues, among them the divergent path Kate takes from her religious teachings, and the Biddle brothers' guilt or innocence. It can be appreciated equally on one or more levels, but it remains a remarkably restrained depiction of emotions and passion that are anything but.
    regina989

    Diane and Mel mix it up

    Continuing my survey/reevaluation of Mel Gibson movies (well, somebody has to do it), I give this one 3 stars out of 4. If I were giving stars. Anyway...beautifully photographed, nicely-directed film of warden's wife (Diane Keaton) in 1901 Pittsburgh, in contact with death-row inmate brothers (Mel and Matthew Modine). Diane's in static marriage with warden Edward Herrmann and four kids; goes to death row to read Bible passages to cons...one in particular...! Mel's waiting' on a hangin' while the darling of local starry-eyed schoolgirls lamenting the handsome con's apparent fate. Diane and Mel strike sparks in this period romance. Film is slow-moving in first half, but stick with it.
    tomligon

    This is the first American accent Mel Gibson used on film.

    Mel Gibson's performance in "Mrs. Soffel" is superb in any event, but viewed in the context that it is the first time he played an American character on film, that his brother was played by American actor Matthew Modine, and that the film was based on a true story of two men from Pittsburgh, it is an even greater achievement.
    contact356

    A stunning movie

    This is a visually beautiful movie bringing the story along in with obvious and subtle references.

    The title character is a trapped woman. The 'noblesse oblige'of being the warden's wife coupled with her own frustrations and frailties makes her life intolerable. She loves her children; she hates her life.

    Here, she becomes intrigued by a prisoner in her husband's jail. He appeals to her imagination as well as her sensibility as a woman. She finds a soul-mate in their exchanges as she pretends to read-him-to-reform from bible passages. She flees with him and is willing to die with him to keep from returning to her unbearable life.

    This is based on a true story. But it is a telling of the story of women, most of whom until the last 25 years or so, had little choice but to marry and to identify themselves in terms of their husbands. Their identity was not their own; their choices had to be appropriate to their marriage station; they were judged by how well they maintained husband's well being and their children's achievements.

    While much has changed in women's lives, vestiges of the past still do exist. The references to "baking cookies" in the 2004 presidential campaign signals this.

    Mrs. Soffel represents the lives of women over time. She desperately seeks the love and freedom that her standing in life denies her. This has been a common women's theme.
    5SnoopyStyle

    slow moving

    It's 1901 Pittsburgh. Kate Soffel (Diane Keaton) is the wife of prison warden Peter Soffel (Edward Herrmann). Ed Biddle (Mel Gibson) and Jack Biddle (Matthew Modine) are brothers on death row for murder although they claim to be innocent. Kate befriends Ed. It grows into a romance and she helps them escape.

    This is based on a true story. It doesn't always make it compelling. I can do with a lot less of the courting in the first half. It is terribly boring and terribly long. It takes an hour before they escape. The escape and the fugitive stages have a bit more tension which this movie sorely needs. As for the romance, it's hard to know Ed's true feelings until they become fugitives on the run. Keaton and Gibson do try to generate some heat at that point. It's a 50-50 proposition. It feels more like a romance novel. The most compelling scenes happen in the last five minutes. It is a very long slough to get there.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The jail used in the movie is the actual Allegheny County Jail that figures in the story. Designed by noted architect Henry Hobson Richardson, built between 1884-1888, it served as a jail until 1995 and is now used by the juvenile and family sections of the Common Pleas Court.
    • Goofs
      A toy electric train shown running around a Christmas tree is of a post-1950 design, as is the track. The train is based on 19th-century locomotive and passenger car prototypes, making it more plausible. However, toy electric trains that even remotely resembled the one shown did not exist by 1901.
    • Quotes

      Kate Soffel: Don't you let them take me alive, Ed. Promise me. Promise me, Ed.

      Ed Biddle: I won't, I promise. I won't let them take you.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Making of 'Mrs. Soffel' (1984)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Mrs. Soffel?Powered by Alexa
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 8, 1985 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Polish
    • Also known as
      • Mrs. Soffel
    • Filming locations
      • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production companies
      • Edgar J. Scherick Associates
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $11,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,385,312
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $86,280
      • Jan 1, 1985
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,385,312
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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