PFS Film Review
Bride of the Wind


 

Bride of the WindWomen who stand behind men throughout history have not been recognized for their contributions and their sacrifices. Bruce Beresford, a director who has given proper recognition to illustrious but unacknowledged women in many of his films, has now surpassed his Driving Miss Daisy (1989) and Paradise Road (1997) with Bride of the Wind in providing an autobiographical sketch of Alma Schindler, the spouse of Gustav Mahler (played by Sarah Wynter). The film begins in 1902 and progresses to 1919, with scenes of Vienna that are magnificent video postcards, similar to Beresford’s Double Jeopardy (1999). Alma, who does not particularly care for Mahler’s music, says so at a dinner party attended by the great composer (played by Jonathan Pryce). When she excuses herself for her indiscretion, Mahler goes to talk to her, genuinely impressed that a woman would be so independent and outspoken. (Perfectionist Mahler, who exasperated orchestras by changing his own compositions repeatedly during rehearsals, obviously thrived on honest criticism.) Soon they wed. However, Mahler asks Alma to give up her hobby of composing music to manage his business affairs, which are in disarray. They have two daughters, one of which dies, provoking Mahler to compose the Kindertotenlieder, while Alma goes to a resort spa to recuperate. At the spa she meets Walter Gropius (played by Simon Verhoeven), an architect who is so enamored of her that after they leave the spa he writes a desperately romantic love letter. The letter, however, is addressed to "Mr. Mahler," so he opens the contents and discovers that Alma has a fervent admirer. Although Mahler pleads that he could not live and compose without her, she indicates that she is tired of being stifled as a mere caregiver. After some off-screen consultation with Sigmund Freud, Mahler summons Gropius to his house, urging the two to decide to mate or to split up so that the uncertainty will end as soon as possible. Alma, realizing that her role is indispensable for a rare creative genius, then disappoints Gropius. (Indeed, in contrast with the surreal 1974 film Mahler, in Bride of the Wind Mahler is a melancholy lover consumed by his iconoclastic music describing himself as an outcast--a Czech living among Austrians and a Jew living among Germans.) Soon, however, Alma agrees to have her portrait drawn by Oskar Kokoschka (played by Vincent Perez), and another love affair blooms, but she returns to the spa when Mahler dies in 1911. While away, Kokoschka paints "Bride of the Wind," an oil portrait of the two making love surrounded by a world of turmoil. But upon her return she decides not to marry Kokoschka, again because his possessiveness makes her feel stifled. Kokoschka then joins the Austrian army in World War I, is shot and bayoneted, but miraculously survives. Meanwhile, Alma marries Gropius until his self-centered personality drives Alma away, and he goes on to teach at Harvard and becomes one of the most renowned modern architects of the twentieth century. Finally, Alma meets novelist Franz Werfel (played by Gregor Seberg), who is full of a joy that was missing in all her previous egomaniacal suitors. He encourages her to compose, and they marry and live happily. The last frames of the film provide titles with biographies of all the men in her life, followed by the first public performance of one of her compositions at Vienna in 1919, at the conclusion of which she stands to take a bow, and titles tell us of her subsequent move to Hollywood and return to Europe, where she died in 1964. Bride of the Wind tells us that Alma seduced and inspired four of Austria’s greatest creative artists, but sacrificed her own identity in doing so until her marriage with Werfel, but oddly the film stops before the forty-five years of her life when we are led to believe that her own musical compositions might have blossomed, material perhaps for another film. MH

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