Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best f... Read allPsychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best friend's mother.Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best friend's mother.
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- 1 nomination total
- Paddy Moore
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- Ilsa
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Adapted from Matt Brown's play, the material is poorly translated to the screen which doesn't allow a solid 15 minutes with both of those characters alone in their session without keep coming back and forth between some background moments from each character, or either some present situations with the threats of bombing or Freud's poor health that needs constant care from his daughter, of which we have some tense revelations about her relationship with her dominating father. And they tried so hard to make it a plot twist when it comes about that character and her secretary that it was annoying - specially if you know that while Freud didn't condemn homosexuality as a moral issue, but he didn't want them near him (read Paul Roazen's works on him).
One sort of expects this being a psychoanalysis session rather than a weird chatting between famous authors with opposite views. For the life of me, as it wasn't a session in fact, I still don't have a clue on what Lewis was doing there. The verbal duels are the moments we wait for, there are so many interesting bits and exchanges between them but as a whole it all falls flat because either the dialogue is not that brilliant; the editing makes it all look like a tennis match - there's not a single moment for some monologue or some plan sequence; and the constant sidetrack of past moments that tries to build some character, or show some background but it's all disengaging and tedious.
A film that works with such ideals and challenges about mankind, God, faith and human relations while opposed or favorable to all that must have some coherence between action and dialogues, to create something that we in the audience might have question ourselves or haven't thought about. It must create some excitment even if those issues aren't all that thrilling (to some) and stay in the "boring" play format without distractions. If there's a play and film adaptation that translated such sentiment in a brilliant way was "The Sunset Limited", with Samuel L. Jackson and Tommy Lee Jones. Simple through actions as it stays in a small apartment room and the brilliance from the complex dialogues becomes a fascinating and mindblowing experience. Hopkins and Goode don't share the same dynamic despite being good performers. The excessive use of humor and the many interruptions in their digressions didn't help, and we perceive them as bitter figures that don't reach any enlightning conclusion.
Here's a film that crushed any previous and possible good expectations that I could have about presenting a challenging duel of opposed views from great minds of the 20th century, starring two favorite actors of mine. Its flawed and distractive presentation left me emptied out and waiting for more. Sadly, it delivered so little that either Freud and Lewis still became mysteries to me, and only their works or books about them will solve a little such mystery. I'd rather see Freud's first session, instead. 5/10.
I watched this at home on DVD from my public library, my wife wasn't interested.
Part of the core of the story here is factual. Freud, born Sigismund Schlomo Freud in what is now known as Austria, relocated to London in 1938 when Naziism began to threaten his wellbeing in Vienna. The story here is set in early September, 1939, just a few weeks before Freud would die at the age of 83.
Anthony Hopkins plays Sigmund Freud, he had a habit of using code words to log his sessions and the one purported here was an "Oxford don", not specifically C. S. Lewis. However the author's idea was, "Maybe it was C. S. Lewis, why not?" And maybe Freud and Lewis met to debate the existence of God, Lewis being a Christian and Freud being an Atheist.
Matthew Goode plays C. S. Lewis, he takes the train from Oxford to London to meet with Freud but is very late. He apologizes, he explains that the trains were loaded with children being relocated to the interior of the country to protect them, fearing a Nazi attack was imminent. This is factual.
Most of the movie takes place in the London home of Freud, they discuss a range of topics while Freud is suffering with the jaw cancer that eventually became unbearable. There is also an important side story about his daughter Anna who was shortly to establish Dorothy Burlingham as her partner.
I wasn't enraptured with this movie, Hopkins and Goode are very good in their roles and that kept it interesting. It is mostly a work of fiction as no one really knows if Freud and Lewis met and, if they did, no one knows what they discussed. Still, it is an interesting "What if?"
(Note: Regarding my 6000 IMDb reviews. It started just over 25 years ago, my first review was "The Big Green." I actually was an acquaintance of Milt Oberman who plays the referee. We both belonged to an internet-based motorcyclist club. The SabMag society for riders of Sabres and Magnas.
Anyway, 6000 reviews in 25 years works out to about 240 per year or about 4.6 per week on average. I started just about the time I had retired and was phasing out my part-time job as a traveling auditor. I really enjoy watching movies, and I wanted to put up a review for each just so I'd have a handy reference, to be able to search and remember IF I watched a certain movie and if so, what I got from it and if it would be re-watchable.
While most of my reviews are for movies I also have a number of TV series and documentaries, plus PBS Nova and others. I never set out to accumulate a specific number of reviews but here we are, all these years later and they are still going up. Cheers!)
And that's what the movie is, two men talking, interrupted occasionally by flashbacks to their younger days and air raid to lend this stage play some cinematic credibility. In this made-up scenario -- although the story is that an Oxford don visited Freud shortly before his death, the claim, as here, that it was Lewis, is a fabrication of the play and movie -- they argue around each other, and finally agree only that people are afraid of death.
The rest of it.... well, Freud's beliefs are at the end of his life (he died three weeks after the supposed events of this film), while there are plenty of things that Lewis did say until twenty years after. As for the basic disagreement about religion versus science, that's a non-conflict; as smarter people than I have declared, science is about how, not why. If G*d created the universe we live in, thanks a lot.
Both men are fine actors and easily translate the script into natural-sounding words. I have no idea if Hopkins' accent is a good representation of the Viennese one; Kohli Calhoun is listed as the dialect coach.
While I wouldn't go so far as to call this the most moving film I've ever seen - I think Shadowlands for example was far more moving and The Soul Keeper ( a film about Jung and his female patient ) was more intriguing - I did genuinely find Freud's Last Session to be philosophically poignant. The discussions between Freud and Lewis are intellectually sound and do ask those age old questions, such as if God is good, why is there suffering? A question I guess we all grapple with in one way or another.
This film did remind me a bit of In Lambeth the other play about a fictional meeting between Thomas Paine and William Blake which, while quite different, approached the two sides of a philosophical debate in a similarly genuine and interesting manner.
Ultimately, there is quite a good amount of wisdom and intellectual content in Freud's Last Session and for that I found it fun, mildly moving and worthwhile. The cinematography and acting are decent. If you like psychology, philosophy and films that are really just play's on screen, then I hope you'll enjoy this.
Did you know
- TriviaAnthony Hopkins had previously portrayed C.S. Lewis in Les ombres du coeur (1993) 30 years prior to this film.
- GoofsLewis refers to JRR Tolkien as "John". He was known as "Ronald" to his friends.
- Quotes
J.R.R. Tolkien: Jack, when you read myths about gods that come to Earth and sacrifice themselves, their stories move you, so long as you read it anywhere but the Bible.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 7PM Project: Episode dated 19 April 2024 (2024)
- SoundtracksVariations on an Original Theme, Op. 36, 'Enigma' Variation 9: Nimrod
Composed by Edward Elgar
Performed by Symfonický orchester Slovenského rozhlasu (as Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra) & Adrian Leaper (Conductor)
Licensed courtesy of Naxos Music UK Ltd
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $906,283
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $45,590
- Dec 24, 2023
- Gross worldwide
- $3,492,756
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color