2023/04/22

WHEN NIETZSCHE WEPT – film Dennis Schwartz Reviews

WHEN NIETZSCHE WEPT – Dennis Schwartz Reviews

WHEN NIETZSCHE WEPT

WHEN NIETZSCHE WEPT

(director/writer: Pinchas Perry; cinematographer: Georgi Nikolov; editor: David Jakubovic; music: Sharon Farber; cast: Armand Assante (Nietzsche), Ben Cross (Dr. Josef Breuer), Jamie Elman (Sigmund Freud), Joanna Pacula (Mathilda), Katheryn Winnick (Lou Salome), Michal Yannai (Bertha), Andreas Beckett (Zarathustra); Runtime: 105; MPAA Rating: PG-13; producer: Pinchas Perry; First Look Home Entertainment; 2007)

“A morose and heavy-handed primer for psychoanalysis.”

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

A morose and heavy-handed primer for psychoanalysis, that’s hardly believable and is executed in such an awkward manner that it brings about uncalled for titters at its most serious moments. It’s adapted by writer-director Pinchas Perry (“The Prince”) from Irvin D. Yalom’s fictional 1992 novel.

It’s set in Vienna in the spring of 1882. Dr. Josef Breuer (Ben Cross) is a successful doctor who is married to Mathilda (Joanna Pacula) and has three children, and his best friend is the younger Dr. Freud (Jamie Elman). The two psychoanalysts worked together on a report on hysteria and transference involving a patient they called Ann O, who in reality was a Viennese social worker named Bertha (Michal Yannai ) whom Breuer fell in love with and still hasn’t gotten over being smitten.

One day Breuer receives an office visit from an attractive Russian emigre, Lou Salome (Katheryn Winnick), who wants him to treat the suicidal philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (Armand Assante). The professor who lectures that “God is Dead” to an almost empty lecture hall, has become depressed when Lou spurned his love and suffers from migraines. Since Nietzsche would refuse help for his mental problems, Lou requests that Breuer help the little known genius writer for his physical ailments and on the sly treat his mental ailments. After Breuer reads Nietzsche’s two published books at the time, he agrees to take the case because it’s so challenging.

After getting nowhere, Breuer talks Nietzsche into spending a month in his Lauzon clinic and they reverse roles, withNietzsche treating the doctor for his ill-fated love affair of a patient and Breuer treating the philosopher for his medical problems. This leads to many dream sequences and text book dialogue that couldn’t be more tedious or pretentious.

Unless you have a need to be depressed and to see Nietzsche weep, you would probably do better dancing a Viennese waltz than tuning into this middle-brow academic tune.

REVIEWED ON 3/5/2009 GRADE: C

Seekers of Meaning by Richard Address - Ebook | Scribd

Seekers of Meaning by Richard Address - Ebook | Scribd


Seekers of Meaning: Baby Boomers, Judaism, and the Pursuit of Healthy Aging
By
Richard Address

Seekers of Meaning: Baby Boomers, Judaism, and the Pursuit of Healthy Aging Paperback – 8 December 2011
by Richard F. Address (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars 4 ratings

Paperback
$35.50
1 Used from $29.9511 New from $35.50


Rabbi Richard Address has devoted his career to helping transform synagogues into caring communities. Now in his most personal work to date he explores how the notion of a caring community can be transformative for individuals particularly baby boomers struggling with issues of aging and mortality.


Print length

143 pages
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Behrman House (8 December 2011)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 143 pages

Tracy Brower
5.0 out of 5 stars Wisdom, Insight, PerspecticeReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 28 February 2015
Verified Purchase

This was a terrific read full of wisdom, perspective, and insight. The ideas are well-grounded and will stick with me for a long time. I especially appreciated the stories that brought the philosophies to life and the emphasis on the importance of purpose to our wholeness, longevity, and healthy aging.

Dr. Tracy Brower, author of Bring Work to Life by Bringing Life to Work: A Guide for Leaders and Organizations
Report
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