This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "When Nietzsche Wept" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
When Nietzsche Wept | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Pinchas Perry |
Written by | Pinchas Perry |
Based on | When Nietzsche Wept by Irvin D. Yalom |
Produced by | Boaz Davidson Danny Dimbort Avi Lerner Kristina Nikolova Pinchas Perry Trevor Short John Thompson |
Starring | Armand Assante Ben Cross Katheryn Winnick Michal Yannai Jamie Elman Ivaylo Brusovski Joanna Pacula |
Cinematography | Georgi Nikolov |
Edited by | David Jakubovic |
Music by | Sharon Farber |
Production company | Millennium Films |
Distributed by | First Look International |
Release date |
|
Running time | 105 minutes |
Countries | Bulgaria United States |
Language | English |
When Nietzsche Wept (German: Als Nietzsche Weinte) is a 2007 American art drama film directed by Pinchas Perry and starring Armand Assante, Ben Cross and Katheryn Winnick. It is based on the novel of the same name by Irvin D. Yalom. It was filmed in Bulgaria.
Plot
The film opens with the Russian-born novelist—who eventually became a member of Freud's 'Vienna Circle'—Lou Andreas-Salome (Katheryn Winnick) who had an unconsummated (Platonic) 'love affair' with German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (Armand Assante), and to whom he allegedly proposed in 1882 (although whether her claims are true is very much up for debate). Writing a letter to Dr Josef Breuer (Ben Cross), after hearing of his newly developed talking cure (Breuer was a friend and mentor of Sigmund Freud (Jamie Elman), who also appears in the story, and one of the influential fathers of psychoanalysis). The two meet, and a reluctant and troubled Breuer agrees to Salome's plan; to cure the intense migraine attacks that plague Nietzsche, and at the same time, without his knowing, cure the despair that her refusal of marriage has inflicted upon him.
Salome has persuaded Franz Overbeck (Nietzsche's friend) to send him to Breuer. However, Nietzsche offers no support to Breuer, thinking that accepting his treatment would be surrendering his power to Breuer, so the course of treatment must end. In a chilling parallel, an encounter with a mistreated horse causes Nietzsche to redeem his appointment with Breuer (Nietzsche finally went mad after stopping a man from whipping a horse using his own body, before breaking down in tears and descending into insanity). Nietzsche later visits a whorehouse, where he has another migraine attack, exacerbated by the overuse of a sleeping draught ( a chemical substance with psycho-active properties ). Nietzsche decides that he will, instead of pursuing treatment, leave for Basel. Meanwhile, an up-and-coming psychologist Sigmund Freud, student of Dr. Breuer, suggests that if he was to make some confession to Nietzsche, he may stop seeing any positive sentiment shown as being a bid for power, and indulge in confessions of his own. All while still under the guise that Dr. Breuer is only treating Nietzsches migraines.
So, the next time they met, Breuer makes the suggestion that, while he treats Nietzsche's body, Nietzsche must "treat" Breuer of the despair that he feels after falling in love with one of his patients, Bertha Pappenheim (played by Michal Yannai), otherwise known as Anna O., a famous case which was discussed in a joint book published Breuer and Freud in 1985, a work largely recognized as having major influences on the early psychoanalysis movement.
The confessions lead to the two becoming open with each other, learning each other's way of life and finally the two becoming friends, but not before the film has explored a great deal of Nietzsche's philosophy and Breuer's psychoanalysis. Breuer's anguish over his supposed unhappiness is explored by means of his highly symbol-laden dreams, thus showing the importance of interpretation as a stepping stone in what would constitute Freud's approach to psychoanalytic techniques.
The film ends with Dr. Breuer reentering into a happy relationship with his wife, after finding clearance and reassurance in a hypnotically induced dream, where aspects of Nietzsche's teachings and advice aid in his grand transformation. Nietzsche (now cured of his despair and agonizing migraines) boards a train to move to Switzerland. The film recognizes that there on the shores of Lake Silvaplana, he would write Thus Spoke Zarathustra, his most well known work.
Cast
- Ben Cross as Josef Breuer
- Armand Assante as Friedrich Nietzsche
- Joanna Pacula as Mathilde Breuer
- Michal Yannai as Bertha Pappenheim
- Jamie Elman as Sigmund Freud
- Andreas Beckett as Zarathustra
- Katheryn Winnick as Lou Salome
- Rachel O'Meara as Frau Becker
- Yzhar Charuzi as Hush Man
- Ilan Charusi as Carmen Barman
- Tal Fructer as Girl by Pianist
- Silvia Terzieva as Mrs. Fiefer
- Ivaylo Brusovki as Mendel Fiefer
- Paula Dominguez as Mia Breuer
Historical accuracy
The film is largely fictional, though many facts and actually occurring events are taken from the characters' real lives and inserted into the film for narrative purposes. The book from which the film was based was an exploration of the hypothetical conjunction of Nietzsche's, Breuer's, and Freud's destinies, and their later contributions in the development of psychoanalysis, of which Nietzsche's thought played a significant part.
Besides the historical characters directly depicted, through the film there are also references to Paul Rée, Franz Overbeck and Richard Wagner.
References
- Yalom, Irvin. "Friedrich Nietzsche and Josef Breuer never met". Archived from the original on 2018-11-23. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
External links
Categories:- 2007 films
- Films with atheism-related themes
- American independent films
- American drama films
- 2007 drama films
- Films about Friedrich Nietzsche
- Films based on American novels
- Films set in the 1880s
- Films set in Vienna
- Films shot in Bulgaria
- Cultural depictions of Sigmund Freud
- Cultural depictions of Josef Breuer
- Films about psychiatry
- Films about philosophy
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s American films