I've been hearing about this film ever since an uncle told me that he had seen it as young lad in the 1960s or early 1970s on public TV and fell in love with the film. Especially with Ingrid Bergman's character revenge on the people who scorned whe she was young and on the man ruined her reputation (Anthony Quinn). She returns to her hometown rich and full of hatred.
The film is based upon a famous stage play by Friedrich Dürrenmatt "The Visit of the Old Lady", which was revived on the stage here in Santiago some years ago, with a very famous Chilean actress. Sadly I never went to see it ....Now that I remember, I also wanted to see Edward Albee's "Three Tall Women" and never got around to... lazy guy
Has anyone seen this film? Did anybody fell under its spell?
THE VISIT (1964)
Nando, this is a play that women of a Certain Age love to perform on stage, and it is revived fairly often in NYC.
A few years ago, I saw a movie from Africa based on the play, and I wish I could remember the title and from which country - maybe Senegal, which has a pretty active cinema industry. I have seen a lot of Senegalese films on one of the cable channels over the past few years, most of them very good. Then, of course, there is the TV movie version, "Bring Me the Head of Dobie Gillis," which, believe it or not, has a similar plot involving Dobie and the unattainable Thalia Menninger.
A few years ago, I saw a movie from Africa based on the play, and I wish I could remember the title and from which country - maybe Senegal, which has a pretty active cinema industry. I have seen a lot of Senegalese films on one of the cable channels over the past few years, most of them very good. Then, of course, there is the TV movie version, "Bring Me the Head of Dobie Gillis," which, believe it or not, has a similar plot involving Dobie and the unattainable Thalia Menninger.
Thanks for the valuable info Judith. I have never seen any film made in Senegal. They sound very interesting.jdb1 wrote:Nando, this is a play that women of a Certain Age love to perform on stage, and it is revived fairly often in NYC.
A few years ago, I saw a movie from Africa based on the play, and I wish I could remember the title and from which country - maybe Senegal, which has a pretty active cinema industry. I have seen a lot of Senegalese films on one of the cable channels over the past few years, most of them very good. Then, of course, there is the TV movie version, "Bring Me the Head of Dobie Gillis," which, believe it or not, has a similar plot involving Dobie and the unattainable Thalia Menninger.
Wait a moment! Recently I saw "Moolaadé", but I think it's from Mali aka Burkina Faso, not 100% sure.
I found the film I was referring to. It's called Hyenas (1992).
A few weeks ago I saw something from Burkina Faso, I don't know if it's the same one because I saw only a part of it - it was about a girl who was going to be sacrificed by her village, and dishonored her family by running awa. I have seen a lot of very nice work from African filmmakers. Plus, it's always interesting to see stories about things that are not a part of your own everyday life, with a different point of view.
A few weeks ago I saw something from Burkina Faso, I don't know if it's the same one because I saw only a part of it - it was about a girl who was going to be sacrificed by her village, and dishonored her family by running awa. I have seen a lot of very nice work from African filmmakers. Plus, it's always interesting to see stories about things that are not a part of your own everyday life, with a different point of view.
You are right. Watching African, Asian, etc. films is very interesting and enlightening. This film "Moolaadé" is about a woman who lives in a small tribal village, who shelters a group of small girls who don't want to be subjected to a circumcision ritual. It's quite gripping!jdb1 wrote:I found the film I was referring to. It's called Hyenas (1992).
A few weeks ago I saw something from Burkina Faso, I don't know if it's the same one because I saw only a part of it - it was about a girl who was going to be sacrificed by her village, and dishonored her family by running awa. I have seen a lot of very nice work from African filmmakers. Plus, it's always interesting to see stories about things that are not a part of your own everyday life, with a different point of view.
I would have been unconcerned IF you hadn't made this film sound so interesting. IT'S YOUR FAULT I WANT IT, therefore! ha ha
And while I often hijack threads, I knew if I didn't get this film in its own thread, I'd never EVER remember who was interested in it. Now, I can alert folks when the DVD appears.
And while I often hijack threads, I knew if I didn't get this film in its own thread, I'd never EVER remember who was interested in it. Now, I can alert folks when the DVD appears.