Film Review
In her final film appearance, Romy Schneider gives one of her finest
performances - in fact two performances, since she gets to play two
quite different characters caught up in a compelling revenge
drama. This was the only film where the actress was able to
choose the subject of the film - an adaptation of a novel by Joseph
Kessel - and its director. Whilst making the film,
Schneider was in the midst of an emotional crisis, brought on by the
recent tragic death of her young son, and she would herself die, from
heart failure, barely a month after the film's release in April 1982.
La Passante du Sans-Souci is a
deeply moving film, made all the more poignant by Romy Schneider's
extraordinarily intense and truthful portrayal of a woman who, like
herself, bears the scars of an almost unbearable loss. Jacques
Rouffio's direction is understated but highly effective, conveying the
turmoil, anxiety and despair experienced by those who fell foul of Nazi
brutality in the 1930s.
Michel Piccoli is an excellent casting
choice for the part of the older Max, convincing as the human rights
activist who is visibly marked by a troubled past, and there are some
impressive contributions from the supporting cast. However, the
film rightly belongs to Romy Schneider, an immensely talented actress
who, more than two decades after her death, continues to enjoy the
respect and love of cinema audiences across the world, particularly in
France. She is a true screen icon.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Max Baumstein is the esteemed president of an international human
rights organisation, so the world is shocked when he cold bloodedly
kills the ambassador to Paraguay. At his trial, Max reveals
that the man he shot was a Nazi war criminal who, whilst serving in the
Germany embassy at Paris in the 1930s, authorised the execution and
deportation of countless men, women and children. In 1933, whilst
living in Berlin, the ten-year old Max saw his own father shot dead in
the street by Nazi police. A kindly German couple, Elsa and
Michel Wiener, took charge of Max's safety and whilst Michel stayed in
Berlin to take a stand against fascism, Elsa and Max fled to
Paris. There, Elsa resumed her career as a cabaret singer,
attracting the attention of the very man who would later order the
death of her herself and her husband...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.