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Love Reviews

1971 Certificate 12
  • Rated:
  • 70
  • from 215 members

When a young Hungarian woman's husband is arrested by the Secret Police and imprisoned as a dissident, she is left to care for her bedridden mother-in-law. Striving to ease the ailing woman's pain, she concocts a tale of his fantastic new life in America. Read more

Starring Lili Darvas, Mari Torocsik, Ivan Darvas, Erzsi Orsolya
Director Karoly Makk
Genres Drama

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  • Critics' reviews (3) of Love

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  • 4 stars out of 5

    Set in the twilight of the Stalinist era, and passing sly asides on the cult of personality, this adroit study of the dissemination and reception of propaganda is cleverly couched in terms of a delicate chamber drama. Handled with great finesse by Karoly Makk, there's genuine affection in the relationship between a wife who tries to assuage her bedridden mother-in-law's fears about her son by fabricating letters about his Hollywood success, while hiding her own pain at the knowledge he's in a labour camp. Both Mari Torocsik and Lili Darvas, the widow of the famous playwright, Ferenc Molnar, are superb.

    • Radio Times
  • 3 stars out of 4

    An unsentimental film on a theme that could lend itself to mawkishness. The relationship between the two women is loving yet marked by personal differences. The wife reads the mother letters purporting to be from her son, telling her that he is making goo

    • Halliwell's Film Guide
  • Makk's haunting, atmospheric and beautifully performed film, brilliantly shot by Janos Toth...

    • The Guardian
  • Most helpful member's review of Love

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  • 1 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    A different kind of 'love'

    A beautiful minimalist portrait of longing, attachment, memory and fantasy. Extraordinary !

      • A customer from London, England
  • 1 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    A different kind of 'love'

    A beautiful minimalist portrait of longing, attachment, memory and fantasy. Extraordinary !

      • A customer from London, England
  • Critics' reviews (3)

  • 4 stars out of 5

    Set in the twilight of the Stalinist era, and passing sly asides on the cult of personality, this adroit study of the dissemination and reception of propaganda is cleverly couched in terms of a delicate chamber drama. Handled with great finesse by Karoly Makk, there's genuine affection in the relationship between a wife who tries to assuage her bedridden mother-in-law's fears about her son by fabricating letters about his Hollywood success, while hiding her own pain at the knowledge he's in a labour camp. Both Mari Torocsik and Lili Darvas, the widow of the famous playwright, Ferenc Molnar, are superb.

    • Radio Times
  • 3 stars out of 4

    An unsentimental film on a theme that could lend itself to mawkishness. The relationship between the two women is loving yet marked by personal differences. The wife reads the mother letters purporting to be from her son, telling her that he is making goo

    • Halliwell's Film Guide
  • Makk's haunting, atmospheric and beautifully performed film, brilliantly shot by Janos Toth...

    • The Guardian

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    • When a young Hungarian woman's husband is arrested by the Secret Police and imprisoned as a dissident, she is left to care for her bedridden mother-in-law. Striving to ease the ailing woman's pain, ...

Rating breakdown

215 Member ratings
  • 100
27
  • 90
24
  • 80
39
  • 70
35
  • 60
25
  • 50
18
  • 40
17
  • 30
13
  • 20
13
  • 10
4

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