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Les ombres du passé

Original title: Death in Love
  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Josh Lucas, Betty Gilpin, and Vanessa Kai in Les ombres du passé (2008)
DramaRomanceWar

The devastating legacy of a liaison between a concentration camp inmate and a Nazi doctor reflects on the lives of her sons.The devastating legacy of a liaison between a concentration camp inmate and a Nazi doctor reflects on the lives of her sons.The devastating legacy of a liaison between a concentration camp inmate and a Nazi doctor reflects on the lives of her sons.

  • Director
    • Boaz Yakin
  • Writer
    • Boaz Yakin
  • Stars
    • Josh Lucas
    • Jacqueline Bisset
    • Lukas Haas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Boaz Yakin
    • Writer
      • Boaz Yakin
    • Stars
      • Josh Lucas
      • Jacqueline Bisset
      • Lukas Haas
    • 12User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
    • 39Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Death in Love
    Trailer 2:34
    Death in Love

    Photos30

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Josh Lucas
    Josh Lucas
    • Eldest Son
    Jacqueline Bisset
    Jacqueline Bisset
    • The Mother
    Lukas Haas
    Lukas Haas
    • Youngest Son
    Morena Baccarin
    Morena Baccarin
    • Beautiful Woman
    Betty Gilpin
    Betty Gilpin
    • Young Model
    Emma Bell
    Emma Bell
    • Young Girl
    Vanessa Kai
    Vanessa Kai
    • Asian Woman
    Carrington Vilmont
    Carrington Vilmont
    • The Doctor
    Jean Brassard
    Jean Brassard
    • Young Girl's Father
    Adam Brody
    Adam Brody
    • Talent Agent
    Stu Richel
    Stu Richel
    • The Father
    Matt Walton
    Matt Walton
    • Young Father
    Jake Houston
    • Younger Brother
    Nicholas Sireci
    • Young Brother
    Kelli Giddish
    Kelli Giddish
    • Young Mother
    Joe Forbrich
    Joe Forbrich
    • Hotel Manager
    Ron Megown
    • Older Doctor
    • (as Ronald Megown)
    Seth Fisher
    Seth Fisher
    • Hotel Receptionist
    • Director
      • Boaz Yakin
    • Writer
      • Boaz Yakin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    4.61.2K
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    Featured reviews

    3Siamois

    Weak and indulgent film-making in all its glory

    What happens when the writer of some gems as "The Punisher", "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights" who also directed crap like "Uptown Girls" decides to write and direct an artsy flick?

    Death In Love is the answer. This film does not pull any punch when it comes to gruesome and explicit scenes. Writer/director Boaz Yakin had to finance this film all by himself because he had specific things in mind. This would never have been approved by studios and I understand why he got no financial backing. Having a specific vision, refusing to compromise are all laudable as far as I am concerned.

    It's just that, unfortunately, Yakin's vision seems terribly limited. So are his skills as a storyteller. The founding story arc revolves around a Jewish girl who begins an affair with a doctor overseeing experiments on human in a concentration camp during WWII. Yakin goes all guns blazing trying to showcase the intensity of this relationship and fails spectacularly because there is a total lack of chemistry between the actors and the script is emotionally numb right from the start. She just supposedly falls in love at first sight, with a psycho doctor who looks like an extra in an infomercial.

    The second story arc (which gets the most screen time) takes place in the present and features this woman again with her husband and two adult sons. All of which seem to be mysteriously as nuts as she is for no reason whatsoever.

    In between, we get flashbacks from the time her sons were children and how she'd go nuts and scare them, but it's done awkwardly, like what you'd expect in a direct to video "it happened for real" melodrama featuring Melissa Gilbert or some other has-been.

    The present-day story arc features the most interesting and intriguing scenes. The youngest son (Lukas Haas) is a total waste of screen time as an obnoxious man-child who has various phobias and still live with his parent. But the eldest son (Josh Lucas) gets a lot of screen time. He's almost 40 years old, seemingly jaded about everything. Of lot of his scenes (particularly with his co-worker played by Adam Brody) feature dialogue that, while not amazing, is still better than what the rest of the movie has to offer.

    There are a few themes displayed but Yakin, in the least subtle way EVER implies a strong connection between pain and sexuality. In fact, so strong that he almost implies one is synonymous with the other. This could be a powerful and interesting theme to explore in a few characters but here, it's just not done well. Every character on screen has intense desire to masturbate, and it seems nobody is able to make love without beating his partner at the same time. It's just... amateurish. The story and characters feel artificial despite all the courageous grit Yakin put in the film.

    There is also a strong undercurrent of self-loathing in all the main characters. Yakin is Jewish himself and I sensed that he was extremely critical of a segment of people who shun their origins and hate what they are. And I can appreciate his attempt to highlight that. One of the most powerful scene, to me, was a small one where the Jewish girl at the concentration camp (who receives favorable treatment from the doctor, her lover) refuses to give the rest of her meal to a starving Jewish violinist. Instead, she sadistically eats every last crumb, as if she renounced her Jewish heritage and what she really is.

    All in all, I think Yakin tackled powerful issues in a very confusing way. This feels like a very personal film but unfortunately, the few powerful scenes in there, the great performances by Lucas, Bisset and Haas and the grittiness can't save a weak script and a weak story.
    10tjohnsn61

    Fantastic script, good video and a philosophical plot - a movie that thinking people will enjoy

    Don't let the first few seconds scare you away. After that, the remaining initial nine minutes of dialog in this movie grabbed my attention. As a 49 year old guy, it was like the conversation that I've been holding in my own head was exposed, thoughts that I've never admitted to another human because of my shame, somehow brought out into the public for everyone to hear. Unbelievably honest, real, certainly a glimpse into my very brain with the same rationale and conclusions that I have come to in my own life.

    If you've lived enough of live, you recognize the maternal instinct of the mother for her disadvantaged son. She protects him, puts up with him and shows a patience that only a guilt laden (whether deservedly so or not) mother will demonstrate. Her description of the call of her jilted boyfriend's parent's call is also not out of the ordinary for some of us. The acting of the disabled son, the emotion, absolutely fantastic and realistic. Unbelievably realistic, like looking into someone's personal life.

    The movie only gets better. Watch it if you're interested in exploring the shadows of the human condition in an honest, thought provoking manner. Bravo!
    10sanjeevsingh-62886

    I wont spoil a thing

    I stumbled upon this movie somehow and the description - jewish woman's love affair with a nazi doctor - was ridiculous enough for me to give it a try.

    And so should you !

    This is exactly how I watched this movie and I think so should you. Trust me you will have a great time. Especially all those monologues.
    venusianmovielover

    Deep, dark and psychologically fascinating - a realistic portrayal of how "anything repressed comes out in toxic form."

    Although at times I found this movie hard to watch, I think it is an excellent film about the things that human beings don't want to talk openly about,the underbelly of human life that we all experience and identify with in one way or another. This movie portrays these types of things with a good story, a good script and fine acting.

    The filmmaker should be commended for his conviction to tell a story that was obviously important to him, by investing his own money to make this film. I see why that was required because society in general does it's best to push down out of sight, the very things that need to have the light shown in on. In my opinion film and theater are the best way to do it, and this movie does it authentically.

    I agree with some of the other reviewers that this film's subject matter is very important for all of us as human beings to understand and not be afraid of, so that we may have compassion for others who may be "acting out" some neurotic compulsion that they have "inherited" or been left with from experiencing trauma, as well as compassion for our self. Human beings "act out", it is just a part of the human condition and being alive.

    If you like intensity and a view into deep emotional scenarios this film is for you.
    8frasif00

    Not everyone's cup of tea

    It's a very hard character study. Self loathing, love, betrayal and twisted life is gruesomely portrayed here with no compromise. Not everyone can go on making this movie, I'm just glad I found it. Top notch job guys. Specially Lucas, Bissett and Hall. They gave everything to their character. If you think of yourself as a hardcore cinephile and love character study, go after it. If not, then plz don't try. It's not for you, you won't stay on for long either.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Betty Gilpin's debut.
    • Quotes

      Eldest Son: [voice-over] When you're young, and the woman in your hands is young, you're provoked by the life in her skin, in the muscles under her skin. You can smell life in the sweet perfume of her sweat and her breath, sweet perfume that can make you dizzy. You can sense life in the jittery convulsions of her reactions to every new touch and sensation. And you feel young and alive and jolted by excitement every time you come near her. But the older you get, the older the woman in your hands gets, you grow lulled by the lazy response of her flesh to your touch. Lulled by the numb response of your own nerves to her flesh. By the sluggish torpor of her muscles. The souring perfume of her sweat, of her tears. The souring smell of her old guts belching out air. And it's a curse. Because getting older doesn't make you like being with an old woman any more than you did when you were young. It's worse really, because it lacks even the thrill of novelty of the forbidden. She's just old and she reminds you that you're old, and that your old shell is still taking up space, but that it's life is almost gone. But nothing is worse than being old and holding youth in your hands, even youth that's thrilled by the novelty of you, because you can still smell youth's sweetness, feel the spring of muscles under taut skin, but you know isn't yours. You're not sharing in it, but are feeding off it like some kind of vampire. And you wonder what the point is - what the point of going on living, the point of loving, the point of touching. And all your instincts, your training, have made you too afraid to pull the trigger and end it yourself. To take responsibility that nature's abdicated into your own trembling weakening hands. You stare at those hands, studying them, wondering what they are, why you can't make them do what you want them to do. You stare down at your hands and you realize that even your own hands aren't really yours any more.

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 17, 2009 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Death in Love
    • Filming locations
      • New York, USA
    • Production company
      • DI Love
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $23,412
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,296
      • Jul 19, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,412
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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