Celebrated actor and actress Sir Kenneth Branagh (Hamlet) and Dame Helen Mirren (Prime Suspect) star in this movie by award-winning playwright Alan Plater about one of the great love affairs... Read allCelebrated actor and actress Sir Kenneth Branagh (Hamlet) and Dame Helen Mirren (Prime Suspect) star in this movie by award-winning playwright Alan Plater about one of the great love affairs and greatest scandals of the twentieth century, D.H. Lawrence's passionate relationship w... Read allCelebrated actor and actress Sir Kenneth Branagh (Hamlet) and Dame Helen Mirren (Prime Suspect) star in this movie by award-winning playwright Alan Plater about one of the great love affairs and greatest scandals of the twentieth century, D.H. Lawrence's passionate relationship with Frieda Weekley.
- Elsa Weekley
- (as Elizabeth Brice)
- Director
- Writer
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Plater worked as writer on two Lawrence movies I much admired: "The Virgin and the Gypsy" and "Priest of Love", but here he has saddled his story with an awkward framing device: the two Lawrence scholars talking about the "great man". Alison Steadman getting a cook's tour of the actual Nottingham locations he trod is awfully weak content competing for air time with Branagh & company enacting the man's life. It's all flatly directed and stuffy at times, without the flights of fancy and personal touch that a master like Ken Russell could impart to a biopic.
Meanwhile, the real story shows a young Lawrence grappling with ill health and a boring teaching job when he meets the aristocratic Frieda who is stifled in a Victorian marriage. The two are drawn to each other but realize that any sort of liaison will mean she has to give us her three children.
The story ends in 1912, before the onslaught of World War I, as the couple have made their decisions. In a few year Lawrence would be hounded out of England because he could not serve and because Frieda was a German national and a woman who had abandoned her children. Eventually they would end up in Taos, New Mexico, where they would be free.
Kenneth Branagh is excellent as the young genius who tries hard to escape his working-class roots and write stories about truth and beauty. Branagh has an exceptional moment when he recites the poem "Violets." Helen Mirren is also excellent as the willful Frieda who dares to give up everything to love Lawrence. Older than Lawrence she acts as a lover and a mother figure.
In the contemporary story, we get Alison Steadman as a dowdy students and Philip Martin Brown as a guy on the make. They are totally boring and unappealing and intrude on the real story. My guess is that they are supposed to set the story of Lawrence and maybe act as a contemporary version of "a man and a woman." They fail at both.
Also good are Benjamin Whitrow as Fried'as aloof husband, Ernest Weekley, and Norman Rodway and Alison King as the Hopkins, as an avant garde British couple who spur Lawrence on to find his own truth in love. Hopkin was a leading intellectual of the day and his "open houses" combined robust discussions of politics, religion, art, and literature.
As good as Branagh and Mirren are, stick with 1981's PRIEST OF LOVE for the best biopic on Lawrence.
Did you know
- TriviaActing debut of Liz May Brice ("Elsa Weekley").
- Quotes
Frieda von Richtofen Weekley: It was when I saw you making the boats with the children, and playing in the stream, that I realised.
D.H. Lawrence: What did you realise?
Frieda von Richtofen Weekley: That I loved you.
D.H. Lawrence: I know.
[pause]
D.H. Lawrence: Prove it, Frieda.
Frieda von Richtofen Weekley: How?
D.H. Lawrence: Make's a cup o' tea.
- ConnectionsReferences Effi Briest (1974)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Spuren der Liebe
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color