"Screen Two" Hotel du Lac (TV Episode 1986) Poster

(TV Series)

(1986)

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8/10
A perfectly pitched film of loneliness and failed escape
snaunton16 May 1999
It's a while since I saw it, but this fine film demands someone's comment. Edith Hope (Massey) attempts exile from a failing affair, and from her loneliness, in that quintessential place of exile, a Swiss lakeside hotel. But the other residents, ridiculous and sad, only compound her isolation, revealing the emptiness of disengagement. Flashbacks to her affair in London have a colour and vibrancy that startle in their contrast with Hope's melancholy quiet in Switzerland. Hope must return, without hope, and face the reality of her life in England, no matter how painful. The acting is immaculate: Massey plain and still, passion hidden deep within her; Elliott in a typical role of wise counsel; Julia McKenzie as the absurd lubricious vulgarian, they and the rest of the cast all deliver perfectly pitched performances. Quiet and introverted, accurately reflecting Anita Brookner's novel, this is a very English film and about as good as an English film gets.
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7/10
bittersweet and sad, this film delivers on every level
didi-511 May 2007
Edith (Anna Massey) is a crime writer who lives alone, several years into an affair with married man David (Barry Foster). Seeking to escape her loneliness and a failed attempt to marry someone else, she goes to the Hotel du Lac, only to find everyone else is as lonely as she is, whatever appears to be the case on the surface.

Some beautifully understated acting from Patricia Hodge, Denholm Elliott, Irene Handl, and others helps this Anita Brooker adaptation to shine; while Googie Withers and Julia MacKenzie make a frightful mother and daughter combination, dreadful snobs both, pushy, irritating, and quite sad.

'Hotel du Lac' is bittersweet but quite involving and extremely tightly written and performed. Anna Massey is perfect as the mousy writer in a cardigan with hidden depths and passions she can't quite understand.
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7/10
Hotel du Lac
Prismark1022 March 2024
The bittersweet award winning Hotel du Lac was one of Screen Two's most repeated film. The BBC seemed to put it on each time there was a strike on or they needed to put something on at short notice.

Screenwriter Christopher Hampton who has gone on to win two Oscars as a writer. Has distilled the essence of Anita Brookner's Booker prize winning novel.

Edith Hope (Anna Massey) is a middle aged, romance writer who is single. She is rather plain looking and her friends think that she will soon be confined to be left on the shelf.

However she has been having an affair with a married man David (Barry Foster) who comes to Edith, when he needs her. Edith rapidly did get engaged to marry another man but she jilted him at the altar. A move that upset her friends.

Now she has gone to a hotel on a lakeside in Switzerland to find herself. It is out of season as she observes and interacts with the other guests of the hotel. All female until the charming Mr Neville (Denholm Elliott) arrives.

He proposes marriage to Edith, not out of love but companionship. Edith can even have other lovers discreetly, but she finds Mr Neville is just another womaniser.

The film is touching, wistful, sorrowful and slightly humorous. Especially as Edith first believes that guest Jennifer Pusey (Julia McKenzie) is in her 20s when she is much older and a maneater. Much to the disgust of her mother who seems to want to keep her daughter infantilized.
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10/10
Dissecting difficult relationships on neutral ground
clanciai31 October 2018
This is a very interesting film about relationships with Anna Massey and Denholm Elliott in the leading parts. None of them is very attractive, they are both anti-romantic and on the verge of the critical upper middle age, and still this is an extremely romantic film, even though there is hardly any romance in it. On the contrary. But the film is made in Switzerland in a fairy tale luxury hotel by a lake with overwhelmingly romantic surroundings with possibilities of lake tours in rowing boats and a ropeway up into the mountains, and like in all such hotels there are a number of bizarre guests, who all have a say in the plots going on and affecting them, especially an old lady with a daughter (Julia MacKenzie long before she turned into Miss Marple) who theatrically dominate the circus of intrigues. Denholm Elliott is an aging lonesome man whose wife left him three years ago, why he desperately is looking for company and finds Anna Massey, a successful author from London who has taken time out from circumstances there,. which we learn about eventually. The film is a polyphonic but almost documentary prying into the nature of relationships, almost dissecting them, none of the characters is very sympathetic, they all have their aching and disturbing spots, they all have their disillusions, which is what makes it interesting. Two people with a load of experience find each other completely void of illusions and therefore accept each other in spite of all personal shipwrecks and failures, leading to an interesting experiment, which turns a most unexpected way.
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10/10
A sublime, decadent, A1 drama.
Sleepin_Dragon22 March 2024
Successful author Edith Hope arrives at The lavish Hotel du Lac in Switzerland, for a term if recuperation after a love affair ends, there she encounters several people, all of whom are haunted by loneliness.

The first thing that struck me about this when I first saw it, is just how lavish it is, four decades on, and it is still a sumptuous and decadent production, perfectly shot, incredible location work, and that unmistakable elegance.

It is a decadent character study, every single player has a massive part to play, there isn't a wasted line or action.

The acting is spellbinding, a captivating performance from Anna Massey, one of her first ever performances, Gooogie Withers, Julia McKenzie and Denholm Elliott all perfect.

Patricia Hodge dazzles as the cake eating chain smoker Monica, she's captivating and so elegantly beautiful, I am such a fan.

Lovely to see Irene Handl in a serious role, that moment where she leaves her son, perfection.

Another BBC Screen Two masterpiece.

10/10.
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10/10
A must see
stephen-10015 August 2023
Everything about this production is simply perfection. The casting of the actors is superb, the location filming at the Parc Hotel in Vitnau, Switzerland is just beautiful, the music score completely appropriate - evocing the end of summer/early autumn atmosphere perfectly. The adaptation of the original novel is exceptional and actually improves it. There are memorable scenes throughout with narratives you will memorize and repeat word for word, especially between the wonderful mother/daughter characters played by Googie Withers and Julia MacKenzie. Take time out and watch and enjoy this masterpiece.
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