Enemies: A Love Story (1989 Film) [Soundtrack]

enemies: a love story (1989 film) [soundtrack]

Editorial Reviews
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Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer wrote often about despair and redemption, the subjects of his novel on which this Paul Mazursky film is based. Ron Silver plays a Holocaust survivor who has moved to America and married the Polish gentile who hid him from the Nazis. An intellectual, he is not satisfied with this simple peasant woman and so he has an affair with a sultry émigré (Lena Olin). His life is then made more complicated by the reappearance of his wife from the old country (Anjelica Huston), who he thought had died in the Nazi death camps. Mazursky and his terrific cast find the pain, irony, and sad humor in this material, capturing Singer's tone and bringing it to life. --Marshall Fine

Enemies: A Love Story (1989 Film),Maurice Jarre,Varese Sarabande,Soundtrack,Soundtracks & Film Scores


Enemies: A Love Story (1989 Film) [Soundtrack]
Enemies: A Love Story (1989 Film)
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Making the Best of an Awful Situation
  • 4-Star Film, 2-Star Sound Transfer
  • Long and Drawn Out
  • The comedy potential is not capitalized on
  • grief, love, forgiveness
Enemies: A Love Story (1989 Film)
Maurice Jarre
Manufacturer: Varese Sarabande
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. The Unbearable Lightness of Being (Two-Disc Special Edition)
  2. Enemies, A Love Story
  3. Romeo is Bleeding
  4. Crossing Delancey
  5. Sophie's Choice

ASIN: B000003TE5
Release Date: 1990-01-05

Tracks:

  1. Herman
  2. A Third Wife
  3. Tamara
  4. Kretchmar Country Club
  5. In The Wood
  6. The Rumba
  7. Masha
  8. Baby Masha

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Making the Best of an Awful Situation.......2006-12-28

Life is not always fair. One must often play the cards they are dealt. The Nazis severely damaged the stable relationships of many European Jews. Herman Broder (Ron Silver) has emigrated to New York. His wife (Anjelica Huston) is presumed dead and he feels an obligation to serve as a husband to the woman (Margaret Sophie Stein) who previously was the family housekeeper. She is attractive enough and well meaning, but dumber than the proverbial door nail. Herman is also having a passionate affair with a woman who hasn't quite divorced her own husband. Can things get any more complicated? The answer to this question is a resounding yes. It turns out the original wife is still among the living. What can be done? Somebody is obviously going to get hurt. Who will it be? A saintly man would be desperate to find a morally and pragmatic solution---and Herman is not even close to being a saint. Might he wish to get advice from his rabbi (Alan King)? This particular religious leader, sadly, is not exactly a paragon of virtue. He is only a step away from being a total rogue. Alas, Herman inevitably seems doomed to make matters even worse. Isaac Bashevis Singer's story is filled with much humor and pathos. The well known post 9/11 blogger Roger L. Simon wrote the Academy Award nominated screen play. This movie should be on your must see list.

David Thomson
Flares into Darkness

3 out of 5 stars 4-Star Film, 2-Star Sound Transfer.......2006-09-04

As previous reviewers have stated, someone screwed up big-time with the sound mix on this DVD. If you're lucky, you can catch about every third line of dialogue - a real shame in the case of this darkly witty, Oscar-nominated film. Picture quality is absolutely gorgeous, which makes the sound muddle even more frustrating. (Unbelievable that no one involved has demanded a reissue in all the years since this DVD release.) Still, this wonderful film is worth the struggle - even if you have to resort to turning on the subtitles.

2 out of 5 stars Long and Drawn Out.......2006-05-07

It's a hellish tale about a modern jobe from Bashevis Zinger's Novel. Herman Broder (Ron Silver) is a Polish Jew living in Coney Island after the Holocaust. It is 4 years after the end of WWII and he works as a writer and has a wife whom he wed because she protected him from the Nazis. Meanwhile, he's enjoying the company of another woman during 'business trips' when he finds out personally that his original wife thought to have been killed by Nazis is alive and in New York!! It sounds so absurd that you might think this movie is a comedy, but it's not. There are funny moments, but throughout this movie you will become wrapped up in the very serious moral dilemma of a man married to two women while he's in love with another and the conflicting emotions that all of the characters feel and experience. All of this is brought in a suffocated, sarcastic, sweaty manner, that you feel his suffering. It's really not a movie that I'd recommend.

4 out of 5 stars The comedy potential is not capitalized on.......2005-12-23


Ron Silver plays a Jewish concentration camp survivor living in Coney Island (the time is c. 1950) with the non-Jewish peasant girl (Margaret Sophie Stein) who helped save his life during the war. He also has a Jewish mistress (Lena Olin) whom he visits constantly. One day his real wife (Anjelica Huston) from before the war (he thought she was killed) shows up. So now he's involved with three woman - definitely a man with a big problem.

But the movie refuses to take any big risks; it's obviously a very comic situation, but it pulls up short on rather than exploit that humor (one imagines it being handled much differently and better in, say, a Cary Grant-Catherine Hepburn picture of the '30s). The serious side of the storyline - memories of the war, Silver's insane passion for Olin - also goes only so far. We're left with a feeling of being cheated. The ending, which involves Silver and Olin and a last-minute decision that has dire consequences, seems too ambiguous. The movie is okay as far as it goes, but is disappointing in how it falls short of what it could have been.

4 out of 5 stars grief, love, forgiveness.......2003-07-31

I saw this movie after reading Steven Pinker's non-fiction book on socio-biology, "The Blank Slate." Pinker recommended this movie based on a tale by Isaac Bashevis Singer, for its study of the human condition, ripe with irony, seasoned with despair, love and forgiveness.

The casting is excellent, and the acting is first-rate from beginning to end. Male viewers will wonder how Herman Broder gets so lucky, having three different but highly appealing women in love with him. Tidily, the three women are from three boroughs of New York City, a typical Singer touch, and the movie includes a scene where Broder stands at the subway entrances deciding which direction to take.

Highly recommended.

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