Time Regained
An ambitious project of Chile-born, Paris-based Raul Ruiz, this psychological drama brings to the screen the famous classic of Marcel Proust with fidelity to its interior monologues and streams of consciousness. Proust (Marcelo Mazzarella), on his deathbed in his small apartment on Rue Hamelin, is looking through old photos and remembering his life, as real characters intermingle with fictional ones from his novels. The period is 1914-18, when WWI is raging. Hidden in Paris, thanks to his asthma, Marcel Proust wanders into the night. He finds an aging courtesan in Café de la Paix, which is deserted by the curfew. Charlus, the seducer of young boys, is at the Palais des Felicites where he meets his lovers. Gilberte returns alone to Tansonville to evade the confiscation of her chateau by the Germans after the death of her husband at the front. Famous violinist Morel is hiding in a decrepit hotel. The demoralizing effects of war affect all the characters, hastening their decadence or transforming them into caricatures. In the whirlpool of the grotesque specter of war, Marcel finds refuge in his childhood memories to escape the atrocities around him. Death and decadence, the evanescence of human existence, and the relations between space and time are some of the main themes explored in this film, which reflects the works of Marcel Proust in every detail. Raul Ruiz has on his side a very good screenwriter, Gilles Taurand, and an impressive cast: Catherine Deneuve and John Malkovich, who have collaborated with Ruiz before, Emanuelle Béart, Vincent Pérez, Pascal Greggory, and the Italian man of theatre, Marcello Mazzarella. Shown in competition at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival. more..
Director: Raul Ruiz
Starring: Marcello Mazzarella, Catherine Deneuve, Emmanuelle Beart,Vincent Perez,John Malkovich
You can count on the fingers of one hand the number of works in any given year to which one is moved to apply the word ''masterpiece.'' Raul Ruiz's Time Regained is one of them.
A mesmerizing, shimmering and amazingly successful adaptation of Time Regained.
It is not about memories but memory. Yours, mine, Proust's. Memory makes us human.
Struggles under the burden of adapting such rarefied material.
If you go with the flow, there's seductive imagery and a terrific performance by John Malkovich as a decadent baron.
Emmanuelle Béart
Cabourg Romantic Film Festival (1999)
Raoul Ruiz
Cannes Film Festival (1999)
Best Costume Design (Meilleurs costumes)
César Awards, France (2000)
Ricardo Aronovich
Ourense Independent Film Festival (1999)
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