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Haunted Summer

  • 1988
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
632
YOUR RATING
Haunted Summer (1988)
BiographyDramaRomance

In 1816, authors Lord Byron, Mary Shelley and Percy Shelley get together for some philosophical discussions, but the situation soon deteriorates into mind games, drugs and sex.In 1816, authors Lord Byron, Mary Shelley and Percy Shelley get together for some philosophical discussions, but the situation soon deteriorates into mind games, drugs and sex.In 1816, authors Lord Byron, Mary Shelley and Percy Shelley get together for some philosophical discussions, but the situation soon deteriorates into mind games, drugs and sex.

  • Director
    • Ivan Passer
  • Writers
    • Anne Edwards
    • Lewis John Carlino
  • Stars
    • Philip Anglim
    • Laura Dern
    • Alice Krige
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    632
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ivan Passer
    • Writers
      • Anne Edwards
      • Lewis John Carlino
    • Stars
      • Philip Anglim
      • Laura Dern
      • Alice Krige
    • 14User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos13

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    Top cast11

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    Philip Anglim
    Philip Anglim
    • Lord Byron
    Laura Dern
    Laura Dern
    • Claire Clairmont
    Alice Krige
    Alice Krige
    • Mary Godwin
    Eric Stoltz
    Eric Stoltz
    • Percy Shelley
    Alex Winter
    Alex Winter
    • John Polidori
    Peter Berling
    Peter Berling
    • Maurice
    Donald Hodson
    • Rushton
    • (as Don Hodson)
    Giusto Lo Piparo
    • Berger
    • (as Giusto Lo Pipero)
    Antoinette McLain
    • Elise
    Terry Richards
    Terry Richards
    • Fletcher
    Antonino Iuorio
    • Carriage Driver
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ivan Passer
    • Writers
      • Anne Edwards
      • Lewis John Carlino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.8632
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    Featured reviews

    10tom-2608

    Fantastic Time Travel!

    I have no idea what the other reviewer is talking about- this was a wonderful movie, and created a sense of the era that feels like time travel. The characters are truly young, Mary is a strong match for Byron, Claire is juvenile and a tad annoying, Polidori is a convincing beaten-down sycophant... all are beautiful, curious, and decadent... not the frightening wrecks they are in Gothic.

    Gothic works as an independent piece of shock film, and I loved it for different reasons, but this works like a Merchant and Ivory film, and was from my readings the best capture of what the summer must have felt like. Romantic, yes, but completely rekindles my interest in the lives of Shelley and Byron every time I think about the film. One of my all-time favorites.
    10Shayde9

    The Best Summer of 1816 movie out there!

    The first time my best friend and I sat down to watch this movie, we were watching it for Alex Winter of "Bill & Ted's" fame. We didn't know what to expect other than who and what it was about.

    By the time the movie was over, we knew that it was love at first sight. This movie, while not completely historically accurate, was and is the best one of its genre. I have seen other movies depicting the history of this famous summer and in my opinion, none of the others can compare. It fibbed a little at certain details, but those parts did not take away from the sheer elegance and romance of the story. I have seen the other movies about this summer and I find most of them to be good, but none as captivating as this one.

    "Haunted Summer" has the qualities of a painting. The colors and settings seem to be something one would find on a canvas, framed and hung in a museum or on the walls of an eccentric's home. The costumes were gorgeous and, despite not being the most comfortable clothes in the world, made me want to find a seamstress to create such garb for myself. The whole movie was set on the picturesque Lake Geneva (where I hope to one day go because of seeing this movie) and the serenity that these historical figures found there.

    This movie shows, besides the tranquility found by all the escapees of England's harsh judgements, the strangeness that surrounded this adventure as well. Yes, there were drugs. It was a fairly common practice during that time, a time when drugs were not illegal. And the taking of laudanum (the liquid form of opium) was medicinal as well as recreational. Shelley suffered from consumption. Lord Byron suffered the pains of a clubbed foot. It was not surprising that there would be prescriptions of the strong drugs that were in their possession during that summer. And they were poets during a time when experience was the key. There was no time for prudish caution. Passion and experience were a big part of the Romantic Era. And out of the thoughts and discussions of science, religion and philosophy came the creation of a legend: "Frankenstein."

    Yes, in this movie, we see the beautiful and liberated Mary Godwin (not married to Shelley at that time) played by beautiful and talented Alice Krige. She is the control factor to all that goes on until she, too, gives in to experience. But she stands her ground and experiences things on her own terms. As was the strength that she inherited from her mother and father.

    The actors and actresses in this were perfect for the parts they played. The music fitting. The direction captured the essence of the summer, as I've read about it. This movie was based on a wonderful book "Haunted Summer" by Anne Edwards. If you like this movie, read the book. The author takes the story from what she was able to put together from the actual journals of Mary Godwin Shelley and the other participants of this story.

    If you are a person who loves history (even the little inaccuracies from time to time) and romance and the gothic, then this is a movie for you. It shows the birth of the birth of the monster, which even today teaches us about the morals of "playing God."

    A definite must see movie!
    7georgioskarpouzas

    A Romantic movie about the Romantics

    This movie which concerns the meeting of the two famous Romantic poets Shelley and Byron along with their entourages near the lake of Geneva, captures well the romantic and libertarian climate that our readings and imaginations lead us to associate with such an encounter. A true visionary company consisted by Byron and his personal physician Dr.Polidori as well as Shelley, his lover Mary Godwin, with whom she had eloped and who going latter to be his wife, and the latter's half-sister Claire are a fine team to spend something more than an hour and half with.

    The characters are well developed and space and time is given to Dr.Polidori and Claire even if those were the ones that unlike the others posterity has not crowned with literary fame.Byron occupies center stage sometimes overacted by the otherwise very able Philip Anglim. He tries to keep up with his demonic image of the cursed poet as well as with that of a man who embraces the life-style of a 19nth century gentleman. Shelley is more ethereal more close to the image of Matthew Arnold of "A beautiful and ineffectual angel" although an angel occasionally prone to pranks in the expense of people that take themselves too seriously.Dr. Polidori is a sidekick to Byron, meant to suffer his ironic comments but also his lover. Claire is the sexy and liberated sister while Mary is thoughtful, commanding and introspective.

    There is fine insertion of poetic extracts in the movie, very well crafted and not incongruous with the development of the plot. In the end the voice of Shelley is heard reading the conclusion of his poem "The Sensitive Plant" the meaning of which is very resonant with the content of the movie.

    Costumes and scenery are charming and one thinks that he is in company with the 19nth century gentry. A very libertarian version of it actually with a tendency of long discussions over the table on the difficult topics of social justice and liberty while being served by servants in uniforms.

    The personal relationships of the group are entangled to say the least but even if we allow for poetic license from the part of the director and the scenario, our sources of the real events tell us that was actually the case.

    The element of the supernatural is both manifested and subverted as it is linked with nightmares and opium-produced hallucinations. But I think they fail to do justice to the moral and political problematics of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein novel, to the creation of which a text in the end of the movie refers along with the fates of the characters involved. If one watches the movie he may be left with the impression that Frankenstein is a horror story inspired by hallucinations and nightmares. It is not so, it is a story with horror elements but it is about hubris, justice, prejudice and lot of topics that where the staple of the Enlightenment along with the romantic fervor and touch that Mary Shelley added.

    Inevitably the comparison with Ken Russell's film "Gothic" dealing with the same events and characters comes to mind. In my opinion and if different things can be graded this film is better or at least it is much nearer to the mental picture of the characters I have formed through the reading of their works and life-stories. The Romantics discussing and making verses by the lake is much more my piece of cake than the atmosphere of supernatural terror and licentious excess of Gothic. But this is a subjective opinion.
    10globalpoet

    Whereforartthou Haunted Summer???

    I would love to comment on this film. Alas , my search has always endeth in vain. If any good citizen could help a desperate inhabitant of this ailing planet and restore his confidence in humanity by offering the whereabouts of either a UK VHS or loan him a DVD copy of the VHS; he would, without reservation, be eternally grateful.....

    Blake wrote "The road to excess is the path to wisdom", one hopes my weary road of excess will offer the path to fruition .... If not, I will have to replay the excellent Mr Russel's Gothic in the knowledge that those who have seen Haunted Summer (for better or for worse) have enriched their viewing pleasure of the events of July 1816 whilst I, a fellow member of this melodious plot, rests his lonely case in solitude ...
    8bellino-angelo2014

    Haunting indeed, and probably the best movie made about this subject

    I have heard for year about HAUNTED SUMMER because of the title, because my dad is a huge fan of Lord Byron's poems and in his 20s even looked a bit like Byron and also because I am familiar with the subject. Last March I finally saw it and it excedded my expectations just a bit.

    In 1816 Lord Byron, Percy Shelley (Eric Stoltz) and Mary Shelley get together In Geneva for some philosophical discussions but the situation soon deteriorates and they end up doing mind games, drugs and o****s. They devise a contest to write the best horror story for killing the dullness of summer, and then one of the best horror novels of all time will be written... Mary Shelley's FRANKENSTEIN.

    The costumes and settings were good and it was nice seeing an historical movie so accurate costume-wise. Despite Philip Anglim never became an household name after this he played Byron nicely (same for Stoltz as Percy Shelley), and in some moments there was an incredibly magical atmosphere thanks to the mystical music (especially in the sexy scene at halfway).

    Not to be missed especially for experts about these authors, and overall, a somewhat unique movie.

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    Biography
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    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was originally scheduled to be directed by John Huston before Ivan Passer was assigned the job.
    • Quotes

      Dr. John William Polidori: I have written a play. I think it quite good.

      Lord Byron: Do shut up, John.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Working Girl/I'm Gonna Git You Sucka/Rain Man/Torch Song Trilogy/Haunted Summer (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Andante from String Quartet Op. 3 No. 5 ('The Serenade')
      Composed by Joseph Haydn (as Josef Haydn)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 7, 1989 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Schwarzer Sommer
    • Filming locations
      • Lake Como, Lombardia, Italy(setting: Lake Geneva, Switzerland, Lord Byron's Villa Diodat)
    • Production companies
      • Golan-Globus Productions
      • The Cannon Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,911
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,726
      • Dec 18, 1988
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,911
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Ultra Stereo

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