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    "The Kreutzer Sonata" (movie)...

    Bernard Rose, the director of "Immortal Beloved", is coming out with a new movie based on the novella, "The Kreutzer Sonata", by Leo Tolstoy, that was inspired by Beethoven.

    There have already been at least five movies based on the novella.

    To my understanding, the novella is primarily about how people should avoid carnal love, sex out of wedlock, and how chastity provides guidance and direction. Here is the Epilogue to "The Kreutzer Sonata", it tells a lot about the novella.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Kreutzer_Sonata

    The movie is supposed to be out sometime in 2008.

    Preston
    - I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells

    #2
    Thanks for that Preston - I'm a great fan of Tolstoy, especially War and Peace which I've seen in the superb Russian version and I'm almost through reading the tome - a great novel. As for Tolstoy himself, although a lover of music he wasn't actually a great Beethoven fan. I look forward to this Kreutzer sonata, but does anyone know about Bernard Rose's film from last year?
    'Man know thyself'

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      #3
      Hm...sounds interesting. Thanks for the heads up.

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        #4
        Thanks for letting us know. I will be on the lookout for it!
        'Truth and beauty joined'

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          #5
          Originally posted by Peter View Post
          Thanks for that Preston - I'm a great fan of Tolstoy, especially War and Peace which I've seen in the superb Russian version and I'm almost through reading the tome - a great novel. As for Tolstoy himself, although a lover of music he wasn't actually a great Beethoven fan. I look forward to this Kreutzer sonata, but does anyone know about Bernard Rose's film from last year?
          I have been watching the Russian version also that comes on three discs. I ordered it from Amazon and thought that the dialog was English but it is in Russian and the subtitles are in English, . Still watching it though.

          I thought Tolstoy was a somewhat of a fan of Beethoven because of what Michael wrote sometime ago on the forum, that Tolstoy would praise Beethoven's sonata's some of the time.
          - I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells

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            #6
            It seems you are right Peter, about Tolstoy not being to fond of Beethoven. I just read from a book preview on the internet and it talks about some things concerning Tolstoy and Beethoven.
            Last edited by Preston; 04-09-2008, 01:57 AM.
            - I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells

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              #7
              Originally posted by Preston View Post
              I thought Tolstoy was a somewhat of a fan of Beethoven because of what Michael wrote sometime ago on the forum, that Tolstoy would praise Beethoven's sonata's some of the time.
              I had just been reading a biography of Tolstoy and it appears he could not make up his mind about Beethoven and art music in general. For such an extremely intelligent man, he was subject to all sorts of fads and half-baked ideas and at one stage he said that the only real music was Russian folksong, etc. His novella, "The Kreutzer Sonata" is an example of his ambivalent attitude to Beethoven in that it shows the disastrous effect that music can have on human beings.
              Just to confuse things, Janacek wrote a string quartet called "The Kreutzer Sonata" which is inspired by the Tolstoy work, not the Beethoven violin sonata.

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                #8
                Originally posted by Michael View Post
                I had just been reading a biography of Tolstoy and it appears he could not make up his mind about Beethoven and art music in general. For such an extremely intelligent man, he was subject to all sorts of fads and half-baked ideas and at one stage he said that the only real music was Russian folksong, etc. His novella, "The Kreutzer Sonata" is an example of his ambivalent attitude to Beethoven in that it shows the disastrous effect that music can have on human beings.
                Just to confuse things, Janacek wrote a string quartet called "The Kreutzer Sonata" which is inspired by the Tolstoy work, not the Beethoven violin sonata.
                Hi Mike. Who cares what Tolstoy thought? Who cares what J K Rowling thinks? These people are not any better qualified to evaluate great musical genius than are you or me.
                Btw, did Janacek himself name his quartet? If so, it smacks of ingratiation. And not with the book...
                Regards, etc...

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by PDG View Post
                  Hi Mike. Who cares what Tolstoy thought? Who cares what J K Rowling thinks? These people are not any better qualified to evaluate great musical genius than are you or me.
                  ...
                  Hi, PDG! Yes, who cares indeed. But I'm fascinated by Tolstoy because I think "War and Peace" is the greatest novel I have ever read. I know it sounds like a cliche but it really is astounding and I have read it four times (so far!) I expected the writer to be a great and wise man and I got a hell of a shock when I read his biography.
                  I should have been prepared, though. I know of a composer like that .......

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Michael View Post
                    Just to confuse things, Janacek wrote a string quartet called "The Kreutzer Sonata" which is inspired by the Tolstoy work, not the Beethoven violin sonata.
                    I think that the novella was inspired by Beethoven because Pozdnyshev's wife plays Beethoven's Kreutzer with the man she cheated on Pozdnyshev with.

                    Yeah, what I read about Tolstoy was that he thought Beethoven was artificial! Of all the things to call Beethoven artificial, when he was a man tormented by problems and was very real, in my opinion.

                    Although, I do respect and admire Tolstoy very much. It is just different people have different understandings and beliefs, and Tolstoy's were wrong about Beethoven.

                    Tolstoy made a lot of remarks that probably are not right by today's understandings and knowledge but I feel that he was a brilliant man.

                    Best Regards,
                    Preston
                    - I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by PDG View Post
                      Who cares what Tolstoy thought? Who cares what J K Rowling thinks?
                      Now those are two very very different people! One a spiritual man and the other a practically joke writer.
                      - I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Michael View Post
                        Hi, PDG! Yes, who cares indeed. But I'm fascinated by Tolstoy because I think "War and Peace" is the greatest novel I have ever read. I know it sounds like a cliche but it really is astounding and I have read it four times (so far!) I expected the writer to be a great and wise man and I got a hell of a shock when I read his biography.
                        I should have been prepared, though. I know of a composer like that .......
                        I agree with you Michael - I think the two greatest books I've read are 1)War and Peace and 2) Les Miserables. I've yet to read Manzoni's The betrothed but Verdi thought that the greatest book ever - it's next in my reading queue!
                        'Man know thyself'

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by Peter View Post
                          I agree with you Michael - I think the two greatest books I've read are 1)War and Peace and 2) Les Miserables. I've yet to read Manzoni's The betrothed but Verdi thought that the greatest book ever - it's next in my reading queue!
                          The strange thing is that I discovered Tolstoy at the exact period I discovered Beethoven (early 1968 when I was but a lad of twenty odd summers - some of them very odd ). Apart from the book itself, I would recommend the BBC twenty-episode adaptation of "War and Peace" which went out in 1972 with Anthony Hopkins as Pierre. It's available on DVD but is a bit pricey.
                          Speaking of Victor Hugo, a few weeks ago I watched the same Anthony Hopkins playing Quasimodo.
                          (Quickly back to Beethoven: he is not referred to in "War and Peace" but there is a mention of him in "Anna Karenin".)

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                            #14
                            I was most intrigued by discovering Preston's post, about Tolstoy's book and film entitled, the Kreutzer Sonata.
                            The link he gave to the film doesn't seem to work.



                            Didn't Tolstoy leave his wife or something and become a peasant and lived in Russian forest?



                            .
                            Last edited by Megan; 12-09-2014, 02:55 PM.
                            🎹

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                              #15
                              Originally posted by Michael View Post
                              I expected the writer to be a great and wise man and I got a hell of a shock when I read his biography.
                              I should have been prepared, though. I know of a composer like that .......

                              I do hope you were NOT referring to a certain German composer Michael....
                              Ludwig van Beethoven
                              Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
                              Doch nicht vergessen sollten

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