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Looking Back: Cinema's Greatest Moments: THE ENGLISH PATIENT (1996)
The English Patient (1996).
Why do we love a great film so much? What makes a great film? Before a film is made there is only the concept of it, a dream of a story brought to life. With time what follows the individual filmmaker’s dream as it becomes realized into a film, it grows beyond the filmmaker’s personal vision and becomes the dream of all who are involved in its making. And further, if that film lives and thrives over the years it becomes myth-like, a living symbol of part of the collective unconscious. ‘The English Patient’ is such a film. When I see this film again and again over the years, it never changes and yet it always seems different. Why? Because I’ve changed. Because when I watch this film I not only see the film itself but layers of meaning and all the experiences I have lived over the years since the last time I saw it. In many ways, this film acts as a symbol in my own life, for the chapters in it that began and ended since the first time I saw it and the last and for each moment in my life that I would recall fragments of the film and its music to mind, a weave between my own personal experience and this archetype of a living symbol, this marked history, this movie myth which lives on for so many and is indeed a ‘cinema’s greatest moment’. -Written by Vanessa McMahon
Almasy: ‘When were you most happy?’ Katherine: 'Now.' Almasy: 'When were you least happy?' Katherine: 'Now.' Almasy: 'New Lovers smash everything. For their heart is an organ of fire.' Almasy: ‘I claim this part.' He touched her suprasternal notch, the dip of her neck. ‘The Almasy Bosphorus.’ Katherine: ‘This is a different world I tell myself. A different life. And here I am a different wife.’ Almasy: 'Don't go anywhere. I'll be back. I'll be back.'
“We die containing a richness of lovers and tribes, tastes we have swallowed, bodies we have plunged into and swum up as if rivers of wisdom, characters we have climbed into as if trees, fears we have hidden in as if caves.”
“I wish for all this to be marked on by body when I am dead. I believe in such cartography - to be marked by nature, not just to label ourselves on a map like the names of rich men and women on buildings. We are communal histories, communal books. We are not owned or monogamous in our taste or experience.”
“All I ever wanted was a world without maps.”
“...the heart is an organ of fire.”
Directed by: Anthony Minghella; Produced by: Saul Zaentz; Screenplay by: Anthony Minghella; Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe, Kristen Scott Thomas, Naveen Andrews, Colin Firth; Music by: Gabriel Yared.
1996 Academy Awards[1][7]
05.06.2012 | Vanessa McMahon's blog Cat. : 12 Academy Awards 1996 Academy Awards Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Award for Best Picture Academy Awards actor actress Ann Roth Anthony Minghella Anthony Minghella Best Christopher Newman Colin Firth David Parker Director Employment Relation Entertainment Entertainment Films Gabriel Yared Gabriel Yared Human Interest Human Interest John Seale Juliette Binoche Juliette Binoche Kristen Scott Thomas Kristin Scott Thomas Looking Back: Cinema's Greatest Moments: THE ENGLISH PATIENT (1996) Man Made Disaster Mark Berger Michael Ondaatje Michael Ondaatje Minghella Naveen Andrews Ralph Fiennes Ralph Fiennes Saul Zaentz Stephanie McMillan Stuart Craig The English Patient United Kingdom Vanessa McMahon Walter Murch Walter Murch Willem Dafoe FILM
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