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Freud's Last Session

  • 2023
  • PG-13
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Anthony Hopkins and Matthew Goode in Freud's Last Session (2023)
Watch FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Official Trailer (2023)
Play trailer2:10
5 Videos
25 Photos
Period DramaPsychological DramaDrama

Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best f... Read allPsychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best friend's mother.Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud invites professor C.S. Lewis to debate the existence of God, Freud's unique relationship with his daughter, and Lewis' unconventional relationship with his best friend's mother.

  • Director
    • Matt Brown
  • Writers
    • Mark St. Germain
    • Matt Brown
    • Armand M. Nicholi Jr.
  • Stars
    • Anthony Hopkins
    • Matthew Goode
    • Liv Lisa Fries
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matt Brown
    • Writers
      • Mark St. Germain
      • Matt Brown
      • Armand M. Nicholi Jr.
    • Stars
      • Anthony Hopkins
      • Matthew Goode
      • Liv Lisa Fries
    • 54User reviews
    • 79Critic reviews
    • 48Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos5

    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Official Trailer (2023)
    Trailer 2:10
    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Official Trailer (2023)
    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Teaser Trailer (2023)
    Trailer 1:27
    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Teaser Trailer (2023)
    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Teaser Trailer (2023)
    Trailer 1:27
    FREUD'S LAST SESSION | Teaser Trailer (2023)
    Freud's Last Session: And The Waltz Goes On
    Clip 2:00
    Freud's Last Session: And The Waltz Goes On
    Freud's Last Session: Indication Of Insanity
    Clip 1:46
    Freud's Last Session: Indication Of Insanity
    Freud's Last Session: A New World
    Clip 1:55
    Freud's Last Session: A New World

    Photos24

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Anthony Hopkins
    Anthony Hopkins
    • Sigmund Freud
    Matthew Goode
    Matthew Goode
    • C. S. Lewis
    Liv Lisa Fries
    Liv Lisa Fries
    • Anna Freud
    Jodi Balfour
    Jodi Balfour
    • Dorothy Burlingham
    Jeremy Northam
    Jeremy Northam
    • Ernest Jones
    Orla Brady
    Orla Brady
    • Janie Moore
    George Andrew-Clarke
    • Paddy Moore
    • (as George Clarke)
    Rhys Mannion
    Rhys Mannion
    • C. S. Lewis (Age 19)
    Pádraic Delaney
    Pádraic Delaney
    • Warren Lewis
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    • J.R.R. Tolkien
    Peter Warnock
    • Dr. Max Schur
    Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle
    • Dr. Bernbridge
    Tarek Bishara
    Tarek Bishara
    • Jacob Freud
    Nina Kolomiitseva
    Nina Kolomiitseva
    • Sophie Freud
    Gary Buckley
    • Albert Lewis
    Emmet Kirwan
    Emmet Kirwan
    • Father Brennan
    David Shields
    David Shields
    • Weldon
    Anna Amalie Blomeyer
    Anna Amalie Blomeyer
    • Ilsa
    • (as Anna Blomeyer)
    • Director
      • Matt Brown
    • Writers
      • Mark St. Germain
      • Matt Brown
      • Armand M. Nicholi Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    6.17.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7richard-1787

    Think about it for a second: for whom was this movie made?

    I saw this movie this afternoon - Saturday afternoon - and there were only three people in the hall. I was not surprised.

    Freud's Last Session is part of a cottage movie genre, almost always taken from a Broadway play, where two-man shows are relatively common. The author puts two historical figures together in a room and lets them debate various important issues for close to two hours. Nixon/Frost is the one I remember offhand, but there have been others as well. In the theater - a small theater - I can see this working well. I'm not sure how it works as a movie, or more to the point: for whom it works. Movies, even modest ones like this, cost a LOT more to produce than plays. Can something like this recoup the investment?

    Yes, the two actors give very fine performances. People go to see Shakespeare plays not to see what will happen to Hamlet or Romeo and Juliet. They already know before they enter the theater. They go to see how the actors will deliver the lines.

    But here, unlike in Shakespeare, the lines are not particularly striking. Hopkins in particular did a great job of creating the character Freud, but he didn't have Shakespeare's words - or even, say, those of the playwright who wrote The Lion in Winter - to work with.

    So I'm left with my initial question: how many people are going to pay to see Hopkins and Goode deliver their uninspired lines? And will that make enough ticket sales to at least break even on this movie?

    I enjoyed it, yes, but I found that it was too much of the same thing for too long, and would have been happier if it had been shorter.
    7frankygee

    7 - Theology and Philosophy 101

    Anyone interested in the works of Freud and Lewis, or theology, philosophy, and psychoanalysis will likely find this interesting. Having no grounding in the work of one of both could be a barrier. Freud's health issues and the evil of war add a floor for the good vs. Bad, lovintheological arguments Echoing others, not a stellar script, but solid performances like Hopkins make it quite watchable. Anna's character's and the war's beginning add some plot points, but work fine as a ways to break up the dialogue and aid the flow. While I do not profess to be an intellectual, it's nerdy enough to be thought provoking, which may be it's best feature.
    7Benjamin-G14

    Not a masterpiece, but worth seeing

    As a fan of Lewis' work (though far from being an expert on the guy) I was very interested in seeing this film. Even though the target audience is probably 30 years my senior, I still enjoyed it quite a bit. Hopkins's and Goode's performances really carry the film. Normally, I struggle with movies that use a lot of flashbacks to tell the story but it was done here in such a way as was helpful and not distracting or disorienting.

    I do wish the script had been a bit stronger. There were a couple scenes that seemed to fizzle out rather than having a much needed emphatic response, mostly on Lewis's end.

    Overall I liked the film and would see it again.
    5Rodrigo_Amaro

    Disappointing and hardly ever engaging or enlightened on its serious topics

    "Freud's Last Session" comes as a huge disappointment for me. This fictionalized encounter between groundbreaking pyschoanalyst Sigmund Freud (Anthony Hopkins) and writer C. S. Lewis (Matthew Goode), on the early days of World War II with the first German bombers coming to England, doesn't challenge viewers in asking themselves about what they're trying to figure out while challenging themselves about the nature of man and if God exists or not (Freud is an atheist; Lewis is a Christian believer).

    Adapted from Matt Brown's play, the material is poorly translated to the screen which doesn't allow a solid 15 minutes with both of those characters alone in their session without coming back and forth between some background moments from each character, or either some present situations with the threats of bombing or Freud's poor health that needs constant care from his daughter, of which we have some tense revelations about her relationship with her dominating father. And they tried so hard to make it a plot twist when it comes about that character and her secretary that it was annoying - specially if you know that while Freud didn't condemn homosexuality as a moral issue, he didn't want them near him (read Paul Roazen's works on him).

    One sort of expects this being a psychoanalysis session rather than a weird chatting between famous authors with opposite views. For the life of me, as it wasn't a session in fact, I still don't have a clue on what Lewis was doing there. The verbal duels are the moments we wait for, there are so many interesting bits and exchanges between them but as a whole it all falls flat because either the dialogue is not that brilliant; the editing makes it all look like a tennis match - there's not a single moment for some monologue or some plan sequence; and the constant sidetrack of past moments that tries to build some character, or show some background but it's all disengaging and tedious.

    A film that works with such ideals and challenges about mankind, God, faith and human relations while opposed or favorable to all that must have some coherence between action and dialogues, to create something that we in the audience might have question ourselves or haven't thought about. It must create some excitment even if those issues aren't all that thrilling (to some) and stay in the "boring" play format without distractions. If there's a play and film adaptation that translated such sentiment in a brilliant way was "The Sunset Limited", with Samuel L. Jackson and Tommy Lee Jones. Simple through actions as it stays in a small apartment room and the brilliance from the complex dialogues becomes a fascinating and mindblowing experience. Hopkins and Goode don't share the same dynamic despite being good performers. The excessive use of humor and the many interruptions in their digressions didn't help, and we perceive them as bitter figures that don't reach any enlightning conclusion.

    Here's a film that crushed any previous and possible good expectations that I could have about presenting a challenging duel of opposed views from great minds of the 20th century, starring two favorite actors of mine. Its flawed and distractive presentation left me emptied out and waiting for more. Sadly, it delivered so little that either Freud and Lewis still became mysteries to me, and only their works or books about them will solve a little such mystery. I'd rather see Freud's first session, instead. 5/10.
    7steiner-sam

    Hopkins and Goode are excellent, but burdened with a pretty flat script

    It's a contrast-intellectual-perspectives-on-God drama set on September 3, 1939, in London, England at the home of 83-year-old Sigmund Freud (Anthony Hopkins), and his daughter, Anna (Liv Lisa Fries). The Freuds had fled Vienna, Austria in 1938 after Anna had been briefly detained. Freud was severely suffering from oral cancer and taking a lot of morphine at the date in question. Freud did not believe in God, despite early training in both Catholicism and Judaism.

    Freud's last intellectual visitor in this fictional account is C. S. Lewis (Matthew Goode), a 45-year-old Oxford don, and Christian apologist after rediscovering faith in the early 1930s.

    The film follows the conversation between Freud and Lewis, with various flashbacks at key including Freud's youth and Lewis's experiences in World War I. The film also touches on Anna's relationship to her father and to Dorothy Burlingham (Jodi Balfour), a former patient of Sigmund's and close friend of Anna. The film also notes Lewis's conversion and his unusual relationship with Janie Moore (Orla Brady), the mother of Lewis's wartime comrade, Paddy Moore (George Andrew-Clarke).

    "Freud's Last Session" has Freud and Lewis punch holes in their opponent's perspectives on God, with neither landing a knock-out. The flashbacks and inserts related to Anna provide some breaks. Hopkins and Goode are excellent while burdened with what felt like a pretty flat script. It was a kind of gamesmanship without much direction.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Anthony Hopkins had previously portrayed C.S. Lewis in Shadowlands (1993) 30 years prior to this film.
    • Goofs
      Lewis refers to JRR Tolkien as "John". He was known as "Ronald" to his friends.
    • Quotes

      J.R.R. Tolkien: Jack, when you read myths about gods that come to Earth and sacrifice themselves, their stories move you, so long as you read it anywhere but the Bible.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Project: Episode dated 19 April 2024 (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Variations on an Original Theme, Op. 36, 'Enigma' Variation 9: Nimrod
      Composed by Edward Elgar

      Performed by Symfonický orchester Slovenského rozhlasu (as Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra) & Adrian Leaper (Conductor)

      Licensed courtesy of Naxos Music UK Ltd

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 14, 2024 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • Ireland
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Hebrew
    • Also known as
      • La Última Sesión de Freud
    • Filming locations
      • Ireland
    • Production companies
      • Sony Pictures Classics
      • Fís Éireann / Screen Ireland
      • West End Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $906,283
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $45,590
      • Dec 24, 2023
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,190,596
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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