Gustav Mahler: To Live, I Will Die

Gustav Mahler: To Live, I Will Die


Starring:Gustav Mahler-to Live I Will D
Studio: Image Entertainment
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
Gustav Mahler: Sterben werd' ich, um zu leben ("To Live, I Will Die"), its title deriving from the composer's adaptation of a poem by Klopstock in the "Resurrection" Symphony, remains somewhere between fact and fiction. It's a pseudo-documentary--in German, with sometimes inaccurate English subtitles-- that includes lingering scenes of Viennese interiors and Austrian countryside, almost always to the accompaniment of Mahler's music, punctuated by sparely staged fictional scenes and camera-direct narration from actresses playing soprano Anna von Mildenburg, composer Alma Schindler (who became his wife), and virtuous companion Natalie Bauer-Lechner, all of whom wrote reminiscences of the composer.

The draw of the film remains the gorgeous footage of locales frequented by Mahler, including the opera houses where he conducted during the winter and the forest huts where he composed during the summer. Mahler, played by Reinhard Hauser, never shows his face and tends to recede into the background as a character. Although To Live, I Will Die could therefore be accused of becoming video wallpaper, it does foreground Mahler's work. And that, of course, is what lives forever. --Robert Burns Neveldine
Description
A drive for greatness, a passion for music, a desire for women--the incomparable Gustav Mahler was torn by these forces, in turn leading a tormented life and fashioning undeniably affecting music. This stylized vision of the illustrious composer/conductor's life and inner mysteries, realized by celebrated Austrian filmmaker Wolfgang Lesowsky, reveals an artist of great feeling and a man of great contradictions. Delve behind the music, beneath the genius, into the mind and the life of a uncompromising artist.
Gustav Mahler: To Live, I Will Die
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Mahler: the man, the music, or the meaning of life?
  • Mahler: the music, the man, or God?
  • Easier to digest than Russell's pic ...
  • Yes, there are subtitles
  • Autumnal
Gustav Mahler: To Live, I Will Die
Director: Wolfgang Lesowsky
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Similar Items:
  1. Great Composers - Mahler
  2. Gustav Mahler: Conducting Mahler/I Have Lost Touch With the World
  3. Detaching From the World
  4. What the Universe Tells Me - Unraveling the Mysteries of Mahler's Third Symphony / Stockard Channing, Thomas Hampson
  5. Mahler

ASIN: B00000JMP5
Release Date: 1999-09-28

Amazon.com

Gustav Mahler: Sterben werd' ich, um zu leben ("To Live, I Will Die"), its title deriving from the composer's adaptation of a poem by Klopstock in the "Resurrection" Symphony, remains somewhere between fact and fiction. It's a pseudo-documentary--in German, with sometimes inaccurate English subtitles-- that includes lingering scenes of Viennese interiors and Austrian countryside, almost always to the accompaniment of Mahler's music, punctuated by sparely staged fictional scenes and camera-direct narration from actresses playing soprano Anna von Mildenburg, composer Alma Schindler (who became his wife), and virtuous companion Natalie Bauer-Lechner, all of whom wrote reminiscences of the composer.

The draw of the film remains the gorgeous footage of locales frequented by Mahler, including the opera houses where he conducted during the winter and the forest huts where he composed during the summer. Mahler, played by Reinhard Hauser, never shows his face and tends to recede into the background as a character. Although To Live, I Will Die could therefore be accused of becoming video wallpaper, it does foreground Mahler's work. And that, of course, is what lives forever. --Robert Burns Neveldine

Description

A drive for greatness, a passion for music, a desire for women--the incomparable Gustav Mahler was torn by these forces, in turn leading a tormented life and fashioning undeniably affecting music. This stylized vision of the illustrious composer/conductor's life and inner mysteries, realized by celebrated Austrian filmmaker Wolfgang Lesowsky, reveals an artist of great feeling and a man of great contradictions. Delve behind the music, beneath the genius, into the mind and the life of a uncompromising artist.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Mahler: the man, the music, or the meaning of life?.......2006-02-13

If you are relatively new to Mahler and his music, this might be the best choice for you. It tells the story of Mahler's life and struggles, and includes many excellent pieces of his music. So, if you've just discovered, or want to discover Mahler, this is the place to start.

If you prefer to learn about Mahler the man, start with Ken Russell's "Mahler." It's a bit bizarre at times, but it will certainly teach you about the little Jewish boy who grew up to revolutionize the meaning and uses of music. You really get to know the man, and his beautiful, beloved wife, Alma.

There is another option too. You can opt for the metaphysical, and see "What the Universe Tells Me." This film includes the entire Third Symphony. Then, with beautiful photography of Nature's beauty, which inspired so much of Mahler's music. it goes a step further: it includes interviews and commentaries by philosophers, music historians, and even theologians, who remark on the almost supernatural intelligence which so many of us find in Mahler's music.

Choose your own starting point, but I hope you'll come to appreciate the man who provides an entirely different appreciation of music and life. I should also advise you that the film is in German, but you can choose English subtitles. (Wanted to warn you about that in case you just can't stand subtitles.)



4 out of 5 stars Mahler: the music, the man, or God?.......2005-06-22


If you are relatively new to Mahler and his music, this might be the best choice for you. It tells the story of Mahler's life and struggles, and includes many excellent pieces of his music. So, if you've just discovered, or want to discover Mahler, this is the place to start.

If you prefer to learn about Mahler the man, start with Ken Russell's "Mahler." It's a bit bizarre at times, but it will certainly teach you about the little Jewish boy who grew up to revolutionize the meaning and uses of music. You really get to know the man, and his poor beloved wife, Alma.

There is another option too. You can opt for the metaphysical, and see "What the Universe Tells Me." This film includes the entire Third Symphony. Then, with beautiful photography of Nature's beauty, which inspired so much of Mahler's music. it goes a step further: it includes interviews and commentaries by philosophers, music historians, and even theologians, who remark on the almost supernatural intelligence which so many of us find in Mahler's music.

Choose your own starting point, but I hope you'll come to appreciate the man who provides an entirely different appreciation of music and life.


4 out of 5 stars Easier to digest than Russell's pic ..........2001-07-30

I have been longing for a good Mahler movie that is not self-consiciously arty and seeks to tell it like it was. Maybe that is expecting too much. This movie is not nearly as pretentious as Ken Russell's film, though at least we can appreciate Russell's passionate committment to his subject. Here, there is less passion and more strict storytelling, yet now and then we are subjected to paroxyms of awkward and studied profundity that seem inevitable given who Mahler was and what he was about. That said, I found my particular video copy of excellent technical quality and perfectly fine as video accompaniment to Mahler's stupendous compositions. A must for Mahlerians everywhere!

3 out of 5 stars Yes, there are subtitles.......2000-09-18

This Austrian documentary about Gustav Mahler tries a few new tricks. To judge from some of the comments from other reviewers, they may be a bit unsettling. I suspect, however, that some of the confusion may result from poor disc interface design. English subtitles are available, but the default is to play the disc in German without them. You have to request the menu screen; otherwise it will play without subtitles.

In fact, much of the film uses tried and true documentary techniques: an impersonal voice relating events in Mahler's life over period photographs; shots of locations, such as the Vienna Opera, where he worked; letters from the composer read out loud, and so on. Even some of the deviations from standard technique, such as costumed actors speaking as people from the composer's life, are not that unusual. Peter Watkins's EDVARD MUNCH, for example, shoots the painter's life as if Watkins were a documentary filmmaker in 1880s Oslo. Even some PBS documentaries, such as their recent series on the American Revolution, borrow this convention. (And when you think about it, this is no more bizarre than interviews with historical experts who speak as if, say, they were actually at the Battle of Gettysburg, or who blithely impute motivations to people as if they somehow had access to their historical subject's dead head. It's bad enough when novelists pull this trick; historians should be a bit more circumspect.)

The only aspects of the film that may seem a little unusual are things like repeated images of train engines to signify changes in Mahler's life, or the length of time given over to performing his music. (Then again, this is a film about a composer, is it not?) Even here, though, the film is far less radical than the work of, say, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, or Jean-Luc Godard.

So, does it provide us with a sense of the composer's life and significance? Yes, at least as well as the average documentary, and considerably better than the PBS series about Great Composers. It is not as conventionally entertaining as a fictional biopic, but it isn't trying to be. On the other hand, because it is a documentary, and because its form is relatively open, it is able to provide a broader context than a standard fiction feature. A good deal is devoted to how Mahler's career was effected by Austrian anti-Semitism, for example. If the film can be said to have a major fault, it lies in daring to mix forms (documentary and drama), something that always makes people nervous. As far as I am aware, however, no law has yet been passed against this, and I don't see why filmmakers shouldn't explore this option if they desire.

3 out of 5 stars Autumnal.......2000-08-03

This is a German documentary touching on a number of events in
Mahler's life, but not a complete biography. It has English
subtitles, but only the German audio track. The film consists
voice-over narration with impersonations of historical characters
combined with footage of landscapes, buildings, railroads, nature
close-ups, period photographs, and documents; all of it accompanied by
Mahler's music. There are fairly long bits with no narration or
speaking. A discussion in a Viennese coffee shop is enacted to
demontrate the anti-Semitism facing. Mahler when he was appointed to
the Vienna opera. Slow and murky, it doesn't have the brio of the
Ken Russel film.

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