03-09-2011

FNE at Venice IFF 2011: Competition: A Dangerous Method

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    VENICE: David Cronenberg's A Dangerous Method is a much more conventional film than his recent work with a mostly straight historical recounting of the intersection of the lives of psychiatrists Carl Jung, Sigmund Freud and Jung's beautiful young patient Sabina Spielrein. The period pic set is in pre-World War I Zurich and Vienna and boasts a stellar cast with Keira Knightley as the troubled Spielrein, Michael Fassbender as Jung and Viggo Mortensen as Frued. Vincent Cassel puts in a short but vivid appearance as the debauched psychiatrist Otto Gross.

    The story is based on the true life clash between Jung and Freud that eventually led to their estrangement and the split of psychoanalysis into two separate branches, Freudian and Jungian. Christopher Hampton's script is based on John Kerr's book A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud and Sabina Spielrein which recounts the clash of the two founders of psychoanalysis and the influence of the Russian patient Spielrein who eventually became a pioneering psychiatrist herself specializing in child psychiatry.

    Hampton's script grew out of his 2003 stage play The Talking Cure and the film does not shy away from the dialogue based nature of the action but instead embraces it with the long discussions of Jung and Freud on their first meeting in Vienna forming a key part of the action.

    The story begins at a mental hospital outside Zurich where Jung is treating Spielrein who has violent seizures and has been hospitalized for hysteria. Jung decides to treat her with the Freudian method he has been studying and begins to speak with her learning that her mental condition stems from being abused by her father starting at an early age. As the "talking cure" begins to work Spielrein is revealed as an intelligent and beautiful woman that Jung is greatly attracted to. To get a better idea of how to treat her and to test his own ideas about psychoanalysis Jung travels to Vienna for a meeting with his master Freud. The two strong personalities speak for hours and establish a strong intellectual comradeship. Freud sees Jung as his student and heir. But Jung has his own ideas and wants to strike out in new directions chaffing under the discipline of the Freudian model. Returning to Switzerland, the married Jung embarks on a passionate affair with Spielrein, egged on by his patient Otto Gross who urges him to set aside his inhibitions.

    Torn by guilt both as a husband and as a doctor Jung terminates the affair. But an angry Spielrein tries to expose him and eventually after a full recovery leaves Jung to join Freud in Vienna as his student.

    The dialogue could easily flounder with Jung and Freud spouting such a series of profound pronouncements but under Hampton's deft handling it comes off all sounding entirely natural. Knightley gives one of the strongest performances of her career starting out as the hysterical and reckless Spielrein and transforming into the serious and intellectual professional whose thinking influenced both Freud's and Jung's theories. Fassbender also turns in a fine performance as the professional and disciplined Jung with the seething passion he is repressing lurking just below the surface.

    Cinematographer Peter Suschitzky who is a regular Cronenberg collaborator lenses beautiful period settings for Zurich and Vienna that save the film from becoming a stage play and keep it cinematographic. Lush costumes and interiors complete the period feel.

    A successful biographical tale with a contemporary feeling and plenty of sultry sex scenes this promises to be one of the most audience popular of Cronenberg's works.

    Credits:

    Germany, Canada

    Director: David Cronenberg

    Scriptwriter: Christopher Hampton

    DoP: Peter Suschitzky

    Cast: Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbender, Vincent Cassel, Sarah Gordon

    Production: Recorded Picture Company