The House of the Spirits (film)

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The House of the Spirits
File:The House of Spirits Poster.jpg
Promotional poster (US)
Directed by Bille August
Produced by Bernd Eichinger
Written by Isabel Allende (novel)
Bille August (screenplay)
Starring Meryl Streep
Glenn Close
Jeremy Irons
Winona Ryder
Antonio Banderas
Vanessa Redgrave
Music by Hans Zimmer
Cinematography Jörgen Persson
Edited by Janus Billeskov Jansen
Production
company
Distributed by Miramax Films (US)
Release dates
October 17, 1993 (Germany)
April 1, 1994 (US)
Running time
140 minutes
Country Germany
Denmark
Portugal
Language English
Budget $40 million[1]
Box office $6,265,311 (US)[1]

The House of the Spirits is a 1993 German-Danish-Portuguese period drama directed by Bille August and starring Jeremy Irons, Meryl Streep, Glenn Close, Winona Ryder, Antonio Banderas and Vanessa Redgrave. The supporting cast includes María Conchita Alonso, Armin Mueller-Stahl, and Jan Niklas.

Based on the 1982 novel La Casa de los Espíritus by Isabel Allende, the film is about the life of a young lady named Clara during the military dictatorship in Chile, and her recollection of her family history, mainly the rise of her husband, Esteban Trueba. The film won some awards, (Bavarian Film Awards, German Film Awards, the Golden Screen (Germany), Havana Film Festival, and Robert Festival (Denmark), the German Phono Academy and the Guild of German Art House Cinemas).[2]

Plot

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Prologue

A young woman, Blanca Trueba (Winona Ryder), arrives at a house with an old man and the young woman starts remembering her life.

Clara and Esteban

Blanca's mother, Clara del Valle (Meryl Streep) was a child with psychic power when Esteban Trueba (Jeremy Irons) came to propose to Clara's older sister, Rosa del Valle. Esteban left his fiancée with her family to earn money for their wedding. One day, Clara has a vision and tells her sister Rosa that there will be a death in the family. The next day, Rosa dies after drinking poison intended for her father, Senator Severo. Clara blames herself for her sister's death, and after watching her sister's autopsy, decides never to speak again.

Esteban was heartbroken. At home, his sister, Férula (Glenn Close) lives and take care of their sick mother. Esteban used the money he earned from mining and bought a hacienda, Tres Marías. He finds many natives living on his land and tells them to work for him for food and shelter. For the next twenty years, Esteban makes Tres Marías an example of a successful Hacienda. He spends some nights with Tránsito, a local prostitute (María Conchita Alonso), to whom he lends money so she can start a new career in the capital. One day he rapes a peasant girl, Pancha García (Sarita Choudhury) and she gave birth to a son.

Twenty years later, Esteban receives a letter that his mother has died. After her funeral, Esteban decides to ask for Clara's hand, despite Férula's protests that Clara is too sickly and will not take care of him properly. When he shows up at the Del Valle family's house, Clara asks him right away if he has come to ask her to marry him, thus speaking again for the first time in twenty years.

Férula meets Clara at a coffee shop to talk about her own future, and Clara, sensing Férula's worries, promises her that she can live with her and Esteban in Tres Marías after the wedding and the two will be like sisters.

Clara gives birth to a girl as she predicted, and names her Blanca. One day, the girl whom Esteben raped, Pancha García appears at the family house with Esteban's illegitimate teenage son, Esteban García and asked for money. Esteban Trueba gives them some money and harshly orders them never to come back threatening to have his dogs attack them both if they return.

Clara holds classes to the peasant children and Blanca. Pedro Tercero, the young son of Esteban's foreman Segundo at Tres Marias befriends Blanca and the two become playmates. Esteban Trueba does not like his daughter to play with a peasant boy and send Blanca to a boarding school.

Blanca and Pedro Tercero

After graduating from school, Blanca returns home to Tres Marías and will meet with Pedro Tercero (Antonio Banderas) by the lagoon every night to have sex. One night while Esteban attends a political party, there is an earthquake, he worries about Clara and Blanca and come home to Tres Marías and finds that Férula has climbed into bed with Clara. He is so angry that he throws Férula out of the house telling her never to come back. Férula curses Esteban but leaves. Clara expresses her disappoint that Esteban would kick his sister out of their family home.

One day Esteban brings the French Count Jean de Satigny (Jan Niklas) to his home intending to arrange a marriage between him and Blanca. Clara senses that the French "nobleman" is a fraud while reading cards, but Esteban dismisses her as folly. While Satigny is still visiting, Esteban catches Pedro preaching revolutionary ideas, that are critical of wealthy landowners, like Esteban, to the peasant workers. Esteban orders the workers to return to work and punishes Pedro with a fierce whipping and banishing him from Tres Marías. That night at dinner, Férula suddenly appears in the house, kisses Clara on the forehead and leaves again. Clara tells the rest of the family that Férula has died. Clara and Esteban drive into town to Férula's modest house where they find her dead on the bed.

Pedro returned to Tres Marías and talks to the peasants about their rights and nearly gets shot by Esteban. That night the Count Jean de Satigny, who is visiting again, watches Blanca and Pedro meeting secretly at the lagoon. He reveals Blanca's lover to her father who immediately drags Blanca back to the house. When Clara tries to persuade him against violence, Esteban hits his wife and she falls. Esteban immediately expresses his regret, but Clara rises and coldly tells him that she will never speak to him again. Clara moves with Blanca to her parents home in the capital.

Blanca becomes pregnant with Pedro's child and gave birth to a girl named Alba.

Revolution

Esteban is busy with his political career as a senator, but as an old man he is lonely and finds comfort in the arms of Tránsito, who has become a successful businesswoman.

During the national election, Esteban believes his Conservative Party will win as usual, but the People's Front ends up winning control of the government. Blanca goes out on the street to celebrate and to meet Pedro now a leading figure in the People's Front. Clara stayed home to decorate the house with Alba and passed away.

Meanwhile, a conspiracy between some Conservative Party members and the military leads to a coup d'état, and the military takes control of the country. At first, Esteban believes it is good for the country and that the military will hand power back to the Conservative Party, but he soon learns that the military have other plans. Under the control of the military, people associated with the People's Party are captured and even killed. Blanca is highly involved and eventually the police come to arrest her for being with Pedro Tercero. Blanca reveals to her father that Pedro has been hiding in their house's cellar and begs him to help Pedro get out of the country.

In the coming days, Blanca is tortured and abused by her half-brother, Esteban García, now an important member of the military. Esteban honours his daughter's wishes and helps Pedro Tercero find exile in Canada. Esteban then turns to Tránsito, now an influential Madam with lots of connections to high level military figures, to help free Blanca. One morning, a beaten and dirty Blanca arrives at her home and Esteban told her Pedro is waiting for her in Canada.

Epilogue

Blanca and Esteban return to Tres Marías with Alba. Esteban is finally visited by Clara's spirit who has come to help the old man on to the next world. Blanca sits outside and ponders her life, looking forward to a life with Pedro and her daughter Alba.

Cast

Production

Principal photography took place in Denmark, but some scenes were filmed in Lisbon and Alentejo, Portugal.

Soundtrack

The music was composed by award winner Hans Zimmer. Additionally, two songs appear in the film: "La Paloma", a Spanish–Cuban–Mexican tune sung by popular Chilean singer Rosita Serrano; and "La Cumparsita", a classic Uruguayan tango tune performed by German bandleader Adalbert Lutter and his orchestra.[4]

Reception

The film grossed $6 million in the United States and more than $55 million in Europe.[5] It was also not well received by critics (two oft-cited reasons were its diffusely episodic structure and a cast of mostly American & European actors in Latin American roles) and currently holds a 'rotten' 29% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 34 reviews. Despite this, however, it received several awards:

Awards and nominations

  • 1994 Bavarian Film Award for Best Costume Design (Barbara Baum) Won
  • 1994 Bavarian Film Award for Best Production (Bernd Eichinger) Won
  • 1994 German Film Award in Gold for Outstanding Individual Achievement: Over All Concept (Bernd Eichinger) Won
  • 1994 German Phono Academy Echo Award for Film Music of the Year (Hans Zimmer) Won
  • 1994 Guild of German Art House Cinemas Award (Gold) for German Film (Bille August) Won
  • 1994 Havana Film Festival Coral Award for Best Work of a Non-Latin American Director on a Latin America Subject (Bille August) Won
  • 1994 Robert Award for Best Editing (Janus Billeskov Jansen) Won
  • 1994 Robert Award for Best Film (Bille August) Won
  • 1994 Robert Award for Best Screenplay (Bille August) Won
  • 1994 Robert Award for Best Sound (Niels Arild) Won[6]

See also

References

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  5. http://articles.latimes.com/1994-04-04/entertainment/ca-42164_1_miramax-films
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External links

no:Åndenes hus#Filmatisering