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Deligas tantum quem diligas
"Only choose such a man as you can love"

A Doll's House (1973) - based on the play by Henrik Ibsen (Norway)

This is a review of an offering from Norway of this play - entitled "Et Dukkehjem"
  (from the Norwegian)

A dolls house is an important movie for the world. Its ramifications couldn't possibly
be overstated. It is literally about the most crucial decisions ahead of us and that have 
been perennially divisive. Its about what value are real,  and most worth defending, and 
who should our leaders be in discerning them for us, given that the world has a psychological 
dichotomy of sorts that has always been unbridgeable between opposite psychological types 
as are presented in the marriage  shown in this movie - and needless to say, cannot be sustained 
when the facts of these differences are brought to light with  sufficient force of emotion.

It needs to be noted that the rendition starring Anthony Hopkins couldn't have been more miscast, in a way as to altogether retard the basic argument. The contrast between the characters involved. In fact the woman who plays Kristine in this Norwegian original work is essentially the type of person that was picked to play Nora in the Hopkins version as it were although the comparison is only fundamentally valid and I don't go beyond that except to say the differences are quite apparent when comparing these women to our Nora in this Norwegian true to the book version. In fact for those viewing this movie in America, or Ireland etc, you will find it hard to see Nora here as anything but an Irish woman as that is in fact precisely who she is to you, if you have studied some of the history of the peoples of Ireland and where it is that they broadly originate from, and so I hope your very special interest is altogether 
captivated in her plight and your concern for her in our world.

At the end, the debauchery of the emotions brought about by a forceful disclosure to one another that these two types of beings are so fundamentally different brings the character of Nora to see her husband in the movie play "Torvald" as a devil in disguise, no less, 
to her own mindset while he sees her as a fallen woman of sorts, lacking a type of virtue as it were, given that she has broken his code, misguided and inane as that viewpoint is by comparison.

Yet they will never come to terms with these differences of opinions as they are born with different minds on the matter although some would apply the nature versus nurture argument to suggest they might be closer brought in the future. This is both misguided and foolhardy 
in fact. All that can be done is to protect Nora better in that what she brings to our world is in fact the greatest care and nurturing of a real Christianly spirit - and we must see that she is never assailed in her life as she is in this movie for being a good soul among men.

Michael Rizzo Chessman
michael@moviesbyrizzo.info

 

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