Our Oscar Review

Our Oscar Review

© Linda Bergman 2012: a HandPrints Featured Writer

 

“The Lady”

Our Academy film series turned serious and e -screened “The Lady”. Luc Beeson’s portrait of pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi, the leading opponent to the savage military junta in Burma and her husband, scholar, Michael Aris, is a heartbreaking true love story set against political turmoilxtremely relevant last night as we.

Michelle Yeoh (Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Memories of A Geisha) is outstanding in her portrayal of a woman forced to choose between her country and her family.

Besson’s take on Suu’s life story begins in 1947 in Rangoon. Scarred forever by the assassination of her father, nationalist leader General Aung San, (who is considered the father of Modern Burma) Suu leaves her politically active mother and hometown to move to New Delhi, New York and London to study. She becomes a mother of two after marrying Michael Aris, a British writer and scholar of Tibetan culture.

Called back to Burma after her mother has a stroke, Suu witnesses atrocities that light the flame of her own activist nature and soon she has a pro-democracy following of thousands.  Afraid of losing an upcoming election to her, the superstitious and brutal dictator Than Tun has her placed under house arrest, hoping that cutting her off from her followers and family will convince her to go back to England. Suu knows if she leaves Burma she will never be allowed back in.  As a result, she stays committed to her cause at huge personal cost.  Her family is only allowed sporadic visits, her mother dies, many of her supporters are imprisoned, and her husband fights a losing battle against cancer without her by his side.

Watching this story of unfailing determination and extraordinary courage, I couldn’t help wondering how a mother could make such a choice — spend years without seeing or talking to her husband and sons. The film and the research I have done since the screening suggests that she didn’t have a choice. Driven by the atrocities she witnessed, her love and respect for her father’s memory, and her genetic code implanted in Burma, she was compelled to ignore her own feelings in order to help millions of people.

After fifteen years under house arrest in her childhood home, Suu was released in 2010 having not seen her two sons for ten years. While in captivity, she received among other awards, the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.

The stunning actor, Michel Thewlis, (Harry Potter, Seven Years In Tibet, The Big Lebowski) who plays her husband, also has a dual role as her husband’s brother.  He reported they had to shoot this film in secret because any word of its being made could have been a danger to Suu’s life.  When director Besson finally met her for the first time in person, filming had already finished in Thailand.  He told students in Lille, France, that he filmed seventeen hours on a hand-held camera while posing as a tourist, and superimposed actors onto the Burmese backdrops. Besson said when he contacted Suu after completing the film’s editing, she said, ‘Thank you, it sheds light on my country. I’ll see it when I’m courageous enough to see the deaths of my father and husband on screen.”

Although Burma is changing, loosening restraints gradually and releasing political prisoners, there are still thousands suffering at the hands of this same regime today. Many of those in peril are Buddhist monks and children forced to ferret out land mines by walking across the Burmese version of the Killing Fields.

 To Learn More About Linda


Handprints Pass-Along Reviews

Who Do You Know…

Who would Like to Know About HandPrints Pass-Along Reviews?

 Click on Another Review that Appeals to You

Iron Lady: Our Oscar Review
The Descendants: Our Oscar Review
My Week with Marilyn: Our Oscar Review
The Lady: Our Oscar Review
The Artist: Our Oscar Review

Click to learn more about Linda Bergman

 

 

Tags attached to this post: , , , Click them to find stories with similar themes.

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Avatar of Linda Bergman

About the Author : Linda Bergman

Born and raised in Southern California, Ms. Bergman started working  as an intern for Fouad Said’s revolutionary CINEMOBILE SYSTEMS while a film student at UCLA. She was hired away from Cinemobile by producer William Farella  at Twentieth Century Fox to train in script, casting, film production  and post production. Her first feature credit at Fox was Executive In Charge of Production for the mega hit, “Billy Jack”. After three years at Fox, Ms. Bergman joined ABC’s Movies for Television development team, and  -- some 100 movies later – was promoted to Assistant to the President of MGM Television. and Director of Program Development/ series and movies. When her first child was born, she chose to work from home and began writing. She has written over twenty four films and produced five of them.  She’s best known for her expertise in writing family drama and strong women’s stories. i.e. “The Jessica Savitch Story” (Lifetime); “The Pearl Buck Story (ABC); “The Barbara Mandrell Story” (CBS). “Matters of The Heart”(USA network). Her films have been nominated for an Emmy, an Access Award, The Alpha Award for Excellence in children’s programming, and the prestigious Writer's Guild Award. A leukemia survivor, she is a contributing writer to Writing For Wellness by Julia Davey. In 2007 she was the keynote speaker to an audience of 4000 attendees at City Of Hope’s annual ‘Survivor Day”. She is a professional photographer and writing consultant,enjoys scuba diving, yoga, gardening and painting. She is married to financial wizard, Charles Bergman, and they have two adult children, Sarah and Adam. She is currently developing “So You Think Your Life’s A Movie” for on-line consumption world-wide, SARAH FOREVER, a film about love on both sides of the curtain, and her feature film, TOOT TOOT TOOTSIE, GOODBYE, is currently in-play at Sid Ganis’ Out Of The Blue Entertainment. In her spare time, she teaches screenplay and creative-writing in Los Angeles, New York City and at  IWWG sponsored workshops on the East Coast. (Skidmore, Brown and Yale Universities.) Learn more about Linda Bergman:

See all posts contributed to Hand Prints on My Heart by

It's Quick! It's Easy! It's FREE!

Registering for The HandPrints Network is easy, just fill out the quick form and you will instantly be able to take part in our community. This includes the ability to rate stories, comment on stories and participate in our brand new forums. Once you are registered, you can update your profile with a custom avatar, bio information and even link to your website.