Sophie's Choice


2h 30m 1982
Sophie's Choice

Brief Synopsis

A concentration camp survivor resettles in New York City but can?t escape her past.

Film Details

Also Known As
Sophies val, choix de Sophie
MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Historical
Period
War
Release Date
1982
Location
Yugoslavia; New York City, New York, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 30m

Synopsis

A Holocaust survivor is haunted by the decision she had to make to give up one of her children to death.

Crew

Nestor Almendros

Dp/Cinematographer

Nestor Almendros

Director Of Photography

Johann Sebastian Bach

Music

Keith Barish

Producer

Ludwig Van Beethoven

Music

Frank Bianco

Hair

Arthur Bloom

Sound

Stan Bochner

Sound Editor

Jan Byczycki

Dialogue Coach

Kitty Carlisle

Technical Advisor

Anthony Ciccolini

Sound Editor

Eric Coates

Music

Celia D. Costas

Location Manager

Michael Dennison

Wardrobe Supervisor

Lee Dichter

Sound

Jay Dranch

Sound Editor

Christopher T Gerrity

Production Assistant

William C. Gerrity

Unit Production Manager

William C. Gerrity

Associate Producer

Alixe Gordin

Casting

Thomas Gulino

Sound Editor

Marvin Hamlisch

Music

George Frederick Handel

Music

Alex Hapsas

Assistant Director

Roman Harte

Consultant

Jack Hayes

Original Music

Robert Hein

Sound Editor

J. Roy Helland

Makeup

Norman Hollyn

Music Editor

Michael Jacobi

Sound

George Jenkins

Production Designer

Carol Joffe

Set Decorator

Dragan Josipovic

Location Manager

Dragan Josipovic

Unit Manager

Dan Lerner

Camera Operator

Evan Lottman

Editor

Branko Lustig

Production Supervisor

Zeljko Luter

On-Set Dresser

Lillian Macneill

Script Supervisor

Michael Maggi

Makeup

Felix Mendelssohn

Music

Sergio Mimica-gezzan

Assistant Director

John J. Moore

Art Director

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Music

Chris Newman

Sound Mixer

Alan J. Pakula

Screenplay

Alan J. Pakula

Producer

Ivica Petricevic

Unit Manager

Nathalie Plemiannikov

Production Assistant

James Potter

Post-Production Supervisor

Thomas Prate

Key Grip

Tom Priestley

Camera Operator

Joseph Ray

Assistant Director

Halid Redzebasic

Makeup

Raoul Schelbaum

Titles

Alba Schipani

Wardrobe Supervisor

Robert Schumann

Music

Richard Shelton

Scenic Artist

Trudy Ship

Associate Editor

Juraj Skuzin

Wardrobe

Martin Starger

Executive Producer

Juliet Steyning-brown

Production Coordinator

Wally Stocklin

Props

Johann Strauss

Music

William Styron

Source Material

Hans Swanson

On-Set Dresser

Sandy Tait

Production Assistant

Josh Weiner

Photography

Albert Wolsky

Costume Designer

Film Details

Also Known As
Sophies val, choix de Sophie
MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Historical
Period
War
Release Date
1982
Location
Yugoslavia; New York City, New York, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 30m

Award Wins

Best Actress

1982
Meryl Streep

Award Nominations

Best Adapted Screenplay

1982

Best Cinematography

1982
Nestor Almendros

Best Costume Design

1982
Albert Wolsky

Best Score

1982

Articles

Sophie's Choice


Alan J. Pakula's Sophie's Choice (1982), from William Styron's novel about the after-effects of Holocaust evil, gives us film's most memorable incarnation of survivor's guilt. If Meryl Streep had inscribed no performance other than this film's tortured Polish woman who can't forgive herself for continuing to live while witnessing so much wrenching death, it would have insured her place in film history. Sophie is forced to make many choices - not between life and death, but between death and even worse death. History, despite its overwhelming presence, isn't what gives Sophie's Choice its power. It's Streep's tragic heroine tearing at our hearts, as she lives and relives the agony she never can shake for long. She throws herself into desperate, fleeting breakouts into sex and drink, revolving around her American Jewish lover, Nathan (Kevin Kline), equally damaged in different ways.

Life, intoxicating as it can get during these brief, heady interludes, is never a match for death. Sophie's tragedy is that she can't see how heroic she has been, and is. She thinks of herself as a failure. Streep's pale-skinned, delicate features become a geography of human torment. Her immersion in the character of Sophie includes an immersion in the Polish language - not just impersonation, but internalization. She has spoken of connecting with her own inner gutteral sounds. So it's not just a matter of getting the sound right - although her flawed, heavily accented English is pitch-perfect. It's also a matter of pulling from her gut a primal depth of sound that contributes to Sophie's innate earthiness, liveliness, integrity, never long able to escape being engulfed by an undertow of sadness.

She's not just an ambulatory accent; she's a personification of soul-sickness, weariness, too much experience of the wrong kind, from the day her stomach convulses when she learns that the respected law professor father in Cracow, who she adored and whose love she craved, whose speeches she dutifully typed, was a rabid anti-Semite who helped devise the Final Solution. Being sympathetic to the Resistance but stopping short of getting actively involved doesn't keep her from being rounded up with her two small children and stuffed into an Auschwitz-bound boxcar, a Polish Catholic as doomed as the Jews she accompanies. Streep is all the more affecting for having chosen to let us see the control Sophie exercises - most of the time.

Much of what she says is with her eyes, sometimes candid, sometimes breaking the gaze of her friend and confessor, Peter MacNicol's young observer figure and Styron surrogate, Stingo. He literally gives the film much of its voice, as narrator and innocent novice who comes to Brooklyn from Virginia in 1947 to become a novelist, touchingly following in the footsteps of Thomas Wolfe and, inevitably in his literary style, Faulkner. Structurally, he's necessary. He's the one who hears Sophie's secrets, hitherto hidden parts of her past she can't divulge to Nathan - including one final soul-destroying one. Not that Styron - or Pakula - gives the Southern writer the best of anything. Of the character's romantic ardor and talent with language there is no doubt. But he's a bit of a pipsqueak, a blank slate, unformed, with the personality of sushi.

Pakula, of Polish-Jewish lineage, has said that if his father hadn't come to America, his family might well have perished at Auschwitz. Certainly, there is conviction in his film's measured progression of moods. Its problematic flashbacks from the novel never break the momentum - although a lot of the tension in them comes from the frozen alertness and fear in Streep's eyes as Sophie, hating herself more and more each time she falls back on survival reflexes. Pakula and his cinematographer, Nestor Almendros, take a chance by contrasting the desaturated Agfacolor-like concentration camp sequences with Sophie's recollection of them in closeup, face framed by spun-gold hair, lips painted scarlet, visage bathed in icy blue light that reinforces her self-image as walking corpse, a vision of dead loveliness. It's an esthetic gamble that wins. We understand viscerally why the young writer becomes drawn to her and longs to supplant Nathan as her lover.

Today, you'd call Sophie and Nathan co-dependent enablers for their shared sado-masochism. They're love and death in the same package. Since Sophie and Nathan have befriended the writer named Stingo, and drag him from his solitude in their restored Victorian Brooklyn rooming house to party and join their spirited capers, the element of betrayal is present in spades, too. After Sophie drinks with Stingo when Nathan isn't around, Nathan accuses Stingo of moving in on "his girl" and accuses Sophie of letting him. Nathan's paranoia on this score isn't altogether unfounded. Still, the brilliant, impulsive and, on rare occasions, tender Nathan's roller-coaster ups and downs suggest that not all is well with him either as he seesaws between manic elation and murderous depression. Nathan's extremes leave Kline without the equivalent of Streep's detailing - her brilliant, seemingly improvisatory way of sometimes letting the faintest curl of an extended finger, or a vocal hesitation, or a distracted tugging at a loose strand of her golden hair do the talking. She's cool, but avoids mannerism. With Nathan, you quickly just wait for the next outsized gesture. Pakula, ever sensitive to mood, charges the emotional air with tense expectation. It gets the film past some slack pacing.

Kline's is a performance insufficiently appreciated for its choices and even subtlety, partly because Nathan's paranoid schizophrenic mood swings make us uncomfortable, squirmy. MacNicol's Stingo does, too, because whatever else he is - sensitive, good, chivalric - he's also something of a drip. It was Streep who recommended Kline to Pakula even before she was cast as Sophie. Cloaked in inevitability as her Oscar®-winning performance is, it's illuminating to recall that Streep was far from a shoo-in for the role. Styron went on record as favoring Ursula Andress as Sophie. Pakula's first choice was Liv Ullmann for her ability to project the foreignness that would add to her appeal in the eyes of an impressionable, romantic Southerner. Ullmann went on to other projects when Pakula took two years to fashion the screenplay. Polish actress Magda Vasaryova, Barbra Streisand, Marthe Keller and Streep (like Pakula, a Yale Drama School grad) threw their hats in the ring. Finally, Streep prevailed, a Slavic Blanche DuBois, gallantly but vainly trying to outrun her conviction that she owes the universe a death - hers.

Producers: Keith Barish, Alan J. Pakula
Director: Alan J. Pakula
Screenplay: Alan J. Pakula; William Styron (novel)
Cinematography: Nestor Almendros
Art Direction: John J. Moore
Music: Marvin Hamlisch
Film Editing: Evan Lottman
Cast: Meryl Streep (Sophie Zawistowski), Kevin Kline (Nathan Landau), Peter MacNicol (Stingo), Rita Karin (Yetta), Stephen D. Newman (Larry Landau), Greta Turken (Leslie Lapidus), Josh Mostel (Morris Fink), Marcell Rosenblatt (Astrid Weinstein), Moishe Rosenfeld (Moishe Rosenblum), Robin Bartlett (Lillian Grossman), Eugene Lipinski (Polish professor), John Rothman (librarian).

C-151m. Letterboxed.

by Jay Carr

Sources:
IMDb
International Directory of Actors/Directors
Meryl Streep: Reluctant Superstar, by Diana Maychick, St. Martin's, 1984
Alan J. Pakula: His Life and His Films, by Jared Brown, Back Stage, 2005
Indelible Shadows: Film and the Holocaust, by Annette Insdorf, Random House, 1983
Conversations with William Styron (Canadian radio interview by Stephen Lewis), edited by James W. West III, University of Mississippi Press, 1985
Sophie's Choice

Sophie's Choice

Alan J. Pakula's Sophie's Choice (1982), from William Styron's novel about the after-effects of Holocaust evil, gives us film's most memorable incarnation of survivor's guilt. If Meryl Streep had inscribed no performance other than this film's tortured Polish woman who can't forgive herself for continuing to live while witnessing so much wrenching death, it would have insured her place in film history. Sophie is forced to make many choices - not between life and death, but between death and even worse death. History, despite its overwhelming presence, isn't what gives Sophie's Choice its power. It's Streep's tragic heroine tearing at our hearts, as she lives and relives the agony she never can shake for long. She throws herself into desperate, fleeting breakouts into sex and drink, revolving around her American Jewish lover, Nathan (Kevin Kline), equally damaged in different ways. Life, intoxicating as it can get during these brief, heady interludes, is never a match for death. Sophie's tragedy is that she can't see how heroic she has been, and is. She thinks of herself as a failure. Streep's pale-skinned, delicate features become a geography of human torment. Her immersion in the character of Sophie includes an immersion in the Polish language - not just impersonation, but internalization. She has spoken of connecting with her own inner gutteral sounds. So it's not just a matter of getting the sound right - although her flawed, heavily accented English is pitch-perfect. It's also a matter of pulling from her gut a primal depth of sound that contributes to Sophie's innate earthiness, liveliness, integrity, never long able to escape being engulfed by an undertow of sadness. She's not just an ambulatory accent; she's a personification of soul-sickness, weariness, too much experience of the wrong kind, from the day her stomach convulses when she learns that the respected law professor father in Cracow, who she adored and whose love she craved, whose speeches she dutifully typed, was a rabid anti-Semite who helped devise the Final Solution. Being sympathetic to the Resistance but stopping short of getting actively involved doesn't keep her from being rounded up with her two small children and stuffed into an Auschwitz-bound boxcar, a Polish Catholic as doomed as the Jews she accompanies. Streep is all the more affecting for having chosen to let us see the control Sophie exercises - most of the time. Much of what she says is with her eyes, sometimes candid, sometimes breaking the gaze of her friend and confessor, Peter MacNicol's young observer figure and Styron surrogate, Stingo. He literally gives the film much of its voice, as narrator and innocent novice who comes to Brooklyn from Virginia in 1947 to become a novelist, touchingly following in the footsteps of Thomas Wolfe and, inevitably in his literary style, Faulkner. Structurally, he's necessary. He's the one who hears Sophie's secrets, hitherto hidden parts of her past she can't divulge to Nathan - including one final soul-destroying one. Not that Styron - or Pakula - gives the Southern writer the best of anything. Of the character's romantic ardor and talent with language there is no doubt. But he's a bit of a pipsqueak, a blank slate, unformed, with the personality of sushi. Pakula, of Polish-Jewish lineage, has said that if his father hadn't come to America, his family might well have perished at Auschwitz. Certainly, there is conviction in his film's measured progression of moods. Its problematic flashbacks from the novel never break the momentum - although a lot of the tension in them comes from the frozen alertness and fear in Streep's eyes as Sophie, hating herself more and more each time she falls back on survival reflexes. Pakula and his cinematographer, Nestor Almendros, take a chance by contrasting the desaturated Agfacolor-like concentration camp sequences with Sophie's recollection of them in closeup, face framed by spun-gold hair, lips painted scarlet, visage bathed in icy blue light that reinforces her self-image as walking corpse, a vision of dead loveliness. It's an esthetic gamble that wins. We understand viscerally why the young writer becomes drawn to her and longs to supplant Nathan as her lover. Today, you'd call Sophie and Nathan co-dependent enablers for their shared sado-masochism. They're love and death in the same package. Since Sophie and Nathan have befriended the writer named Stingo, and drag him from his solitude in their restored Victorian Brooklyn rooming house to party and join their spirited capers, the element of betrayal is present in spades, too. After Sophie drinks with Stingo when Nathan isn't around, Nathan accuses Stingo of moving in on "his girl" and accuses Sophie of letting him. Nathan's paranoia on this score isn't altogether unfounded. Still, the brilliant, impulsive and, on rare occasions, tender Nathan's roller-coaster ups and downs suggest that not all is well with him either as he seesaws between manic elation and murderous depression. Nathan's extremes leave Kline without the equivalent of Streep's detailing - her brilliant, seemingly improvisatory way of sometimes letting the faintest curl of an extended finger, or a vocal hesitation, or a distracted tugging at a loose strand of her golden hair do the talking. She's cool, but avoids mannerism. With Nathan, you quickly just wait for the next outsized gesture. Pakula, ever sensitive to mood, charges the emotional air with tense expectation. It gets the film past some slack pacing. Kline's is a performance insufficiently appreciated for its choices and even subtlety, partly because Nathan's paranoid schizophrenic mood swings make us uncomfortable, squirmy. MacNicol's Stingo does, too, because whatever else he is - sensitive, good, chivalric - he's also something of a drip. It was Streep who recommended Kline to Pakula even before she was cast as Sophie. Cloaked in inevitability as her Oscar®-winning performance is, it's illuminating to recall that Streep was far from a shoo-in for the role. Styron went on record as favoring Ursula Andress as Sophie. Pakula's first choice was Liv Ullmann for her ability to project the foreignness that would add to her appeal in the eyes of an impressionable, romantic Southerner. Ullmann went on to other projects when Pakula took two years to fashion the screenplay. Polish actress Magda Vasaryova, Barbra Streisand, Marthe Keller and Streep (like Pakula, a Yale Drama School grad) threw their hats in the ring. Finally, Streep prevailed, a Slavic Blanche DuBois, gallantly but vainly trying to outrun her conviction that she owes the universe a death - hers. Producers: Keith Barish, Alan J. Pakula Director: Alan J. Pakula Screenplay: Alan J. Pakula; William Styron (novel) Cinematography: Nestor Almendros Art Direction: John J. Moore Music: Marvin Hamlisch Film Editing: Evan Lottman Cast: Meryl Streep (Sophie Zawistowski), Kevin Kline (Nathan Landau), Peter MacNicol (Stingo), Rita Karin (Yetta), Stephen D. Newman (Larry Landau), Greta Turken (Leslie Lapidus), Josh Mostel (Morris Fink), Marcell Rosenblatt (Astrid Weinstein), Moishe Rosenfeld (Moishe Rosenblum), Robin Bartlett (Lillian Grossman), Eugene Lipinski (Polish professor), John Rothman (librarian). C-151m. Letterboxed. by Jay Carr Sources: IMDb International Directory of Actors/Directors Meryl Streep: Reluctant Superstar, by Diana Maychick, St. Martin's, 1984 Alan J. Pakula: His Life and His Films, by Jared Brown, Back Stage, 2005 Indelible Shadows: Film and the Holocaust, by Annette Insdorf, Random House, 1983 Conversations with William Styron (Canadian radio interview by Stephen Lewis), edited by James W. West III, University of Mississippi Press, 1985

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter December 10, 1982

Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995

Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995

Released in United States Winter December 10, 1982