Dokumentarfilm über die Meisterin des Thrillers, der sich, basierend auf ihren posthum erschienenen Tagebüchern, auf das lesbische Liebesleben des Weltstars konzentriert.Dokumentarfilm über die Meisterin des Thrillers, der sich, basierend auf ihren posthum erschienenen Tagebüchern, auf das lesbische Liebesleben des Weltstars konzentriert.Dokumentarfilm über die Meisterin des Thrillers, der sich, basierend auf ihren posthum erschienenen Tagebüchern, auf das lesbische Liebesleben des Weltstars konzentriert.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
Annina Butterworth
- Narrator in English version
- (Synchronisation)
Patricia Highsmith
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Maren Kroymann
- Patricia Highsmith
- (German version)
- (Synchronisation)
Gwendoline Christie
- Patricia Highsmith
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
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As a Highsmith fan boy, I highly recommend this doc! Wow, she was a messy writer, that's for sure. Brilliant. Loved the fact that she published an edition of The Price of Salt under her real name in her final years. Quite poignant.
It's great that the filmmakers managed to track down former lovers of the author; their stories are really intriguing and shed new light on this often mysterious figure.
The filmmakers also make great use of clips from various films based on Highsmith's works, including Strangers on a Train and The Talented Mr Ripley. I think the film could have used an interview with some of the cast of the latter film to discuss the complexity of playing one of her characters. But that's a minor point.
Really well done.
It's great that the filmmakers managed to track down former lovers of the author; their stories are really intriguing and shed new light on this often mysterious figure.
The filmmakers also make great use of clips from various films based on Highsmith's works, including Strangers on a Train and The Talented Mr Ripley. I think the film could have used an interview with some of the cast of the latter film to discuss the complexity of playing one of her characters. But that's a minor point.
Really well done.
The movie starts off with the filmmaker saying "I started reading her diaries and fell in love with her."
I'm currently reading her diaries and it really doesn't feel like the filmmaker read them. The docu portrays her as a man-hating lesbian. That's not true. Her diaries show that, while she preferred women, she certainly slept with men. On purpose. And even enjoyed it sometimes.
The relationship with her mother, too, was much more complicated than the filmmaker lets on. She and her mother actually talked about her lesbianism with her mother sometimes commenting about her current girl friend. Both of her parents read her work and, as Highsmith tells it, were helpful and supportive.
The oddest choice was continuing the Texas theme throughout the whole movie. Highsmith left Texas when she was 6. To see the movie, you'd think that Texas was all she thought of. That's just not the case, at least from her diaries.
I suppose I went into this expecting this to blow me away since the diaries are so powerful. The interviews were interesting...except when the white subtitles blended into the white background. Why is this still a thing??
She's a fascinating woman and deserved a better tribute to her.
I'm currently reading her diaries and it really doesn't feel like the filmmaker read them. The docu portrays her as a man-hating lesbian. That's not true. Her diaries show that, while she preferred women, she certainly slept with men. On purpose. And even enjoyed it sometimes.
The relationship with her mother, too, was much more complicated than the filmmaker lets on. She and her mother actually talked about her lesbianism with her mother sometimes commenting about her current girl friend. Both of her parents read her work and, as Highsmith tells it, were helpful and supportive.
The oddest choice was continuing the Texas theme throughout the whole movie. Highsmith left Texas when she was 6. To see the movie, you'd think that Texas was all she thought of. That's just not the case, at least from her diaries.
I suppose I went into this expecting this to blow me away since the diaries are so powerful. The interviews were interesting...except when the white subtitles blended into the white background. Why is this still a thing??
She's a fascinating woman and deserved a better tribute to her.
Poorly made. Texas theme is used over and over without any artistic or emotional reason as a visual copout. The contemporary shots of New York City were edited in as an easy way out, in a very student film-like manner. The interviews with Highsmith's relatives from Texas, which were not insightful at all and irrelevant, made a film about this great author even more trivial and cheap. The other interviews had the quality of superficiality and talked about Highsmith's profound dilemmas they had no way of knowing anything about. The pseudo-Americana/Texas wanna-be music just adds insult to the wound. It is a very superficial film about a profound, complex person.
Loving Highsmith (2022) was written and directed by
Eva Vitija.
The film is a biography of Patrica Highsmith, who was a successful author and a legendary figure.
Highsmith appears in the movie in archival footage. Many of her friends and lovers give candid interviews. What makes Highsmith different from other successful authors is that she was openly lesbian.
Loving Highsmith reveals that Highsmith was not a lovable woman. She seduced younger women and was a virulent anti-Semite. (She supported Palestinian rights, but this support was overtly linked to her hatred of Jews.)
Highsmith is important because she wrote the first novel about lesbians that had a happy ending. (Novels about lesbians were OK in the 1950's, but they had to have an unhappy ending.) She used a pen name in 1952.
In 1983 the book was republished as Carol, with Highsmith listed as the author. (The book was made into a movie that was highly successful.)
Loving Highsmith was an honest and accurate portrayal of a woman who was hard to like. Maybe Highsmith's story is the reason that the movie has a relatively low IMDb rating of 7.1. I thought it was better than that.
I think that a biopic should be rated on its effective portrayal of its subject--not on whether you like the person portrayed. I rated it 8.
We saw this film as part of Rochester's excellent ImageOut LGBT festival.
The film is a biography of Patrica Highsmith, who was a successful author and a legendary figure.
Highsmith appears in the movie in archival footage. Many of her friends and lovers give candid interviews. What makes Highsmith different from other successful authors is that she was openly lesbian.
Loving Highsmith reveals that Highsmith was not a lovable woman. She seduced younger women and was a virulent anti-Semite. (She supported Palestinian rights, but this support was overtly linked to her hatred of Jews.)
Highsmith is important because she wrote the first novel about lesbians that had a happy ending. (Novels about lesbians were OK in the 1950's, but they had to have an unhappy ending.) She used a pen name in 1952.
In 1983 the book was republished as Carol, with Highsmith listed as the author. (The book was made into a movie that was highly successful.)
Loving Highsmith was an honest and accurate portrayal of a woman who was hard to like. Maybe Highsmith's story is the reason that the movie has a relatively low IMDb rating of 7.1. I thought it was better than that.
I think that a biopic should be rated on its effective portrayal of its subject--not on whether you like the person portrayed. I rated it 8.
We saw this film as part of Rochester's excellent ImageOut LGBT festival.
I love Patricia Highsmith's work so much. It's almost criminal to think that, at least when I was growing up, she wasn't taught at all in school. Always read the Highsmith book before seeing the movie based on it. As highly regarded as Strangers on a Train and Carol are, neither has one-tenth the extraordinary complexity and moral ambiguity of Highsmith's writing (nor, with the exception of Blanchett's Carol, do any of its characters).
Thus any documentary about this magnificent author is going to be of some interest. But by focusing so relentlessly on Highsmith's relationships with women, the film conveys little of why we should care about Highsmith at all. There is little about her professional life -- relationships with editors, failures, sales volumes, etc., let alone any serious examination of her work.
So for the devoted Highsmith fan the movie is worth watching but nevertheless a disappointment.
Thus any documentary about this magnificent author is going to be of some interest. But by focusing so relentlessly on Highsmith's relationships with women, the film conveys little of why we should care about Highsmith at all. There is little about her professional life -- relationships with editors, failures, sales volumes, etc., let alone any serious examination of her work.
So for the devoted Highsmith fan the movie is worth watching but nevertheless a disappointment.
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- Herkunftsländer
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- Auch bekannt als
- 尋愛小說家:海史密斯
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 46.172 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 6.800 $
- 4. Sept. 2022
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 56.602 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 23 Minuten
- Farbe
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