Saturday, December 12, 2015

Pity the Baroness.

Tonight, as is often the custom at Christmas, one of the local stations will be playing the film, The Sound of Music, I am not sure about the connection between Christmas and Nazis but who am I to judge. ............................. For those of you who may not know about this movie, it's the heart breakingly sad story about a true diva, one of the original divas, the stunning Baroness Schraeder (played by Eleanor Parker) and her quest to land a rich and handsome husband. However after spending years laying out the groundwork to reel in a good man, (the dashing Captain VonTrapp) her plans are foiled. ............................................ While the sophisticated and worldly Baroness is planning to come for a visit, along with every true diva's accessory, a gay man named Max, she is unaware that another woman has entered into her lover's household. A young backward mountain girl who climbed down from the hills to hide out in a convent. When the Baroness first arrives, being a woman who knows what she wants, she can always detect an amateur and sees right through the nanny/nun. This holy Mary Poppins starts to bond with the Captain through music and the Baroness becomes practically ill with the sickening sweetness. Giving us the best line from the movie "why didn't you tell me to bring my harmonica" which actually I used at a bbq last summer when everyone except me pulled out a guitar and started singing folk songs. ..................................... Fast forward and the clever Baroness tricks the dull nun into leaving, heaping guilt and shame onto her, it's brilliant. Now she realizes the only thing between her and a new hubby is the scary robot children that he cranked with his first wife, seven children, I guess we know what he did when he came back from being out on the sea. Boarding school, she confesses to max (who I think slept with the evil butler, I just get that feeling). She has the logical solution to get rid of the runny nose brigade, send them off to boarding school. ............................................. Everything is working to plan, things are back to normal when suddenly who shows up like a lost puppy, the nun-ny! Like the beautiful and gracious woman she is, she knows when she has been defeated, yes defeated by youth and the virginal promise of unmarked snow, what every straight guy in midlife craves. With a broken heart she still shows class by giving the Captain a way out to save face for both of them, she says she doesn't want to be tied down and their arrangement no longer works for her. She packs up Max and leaves the two lumps because they deserve each other. ............................................ Later she will be proven right as once he marries the ex-nun he loses his job, they form a band, tick off a bunch of Nazi soldiers, encourage nuns to steal auto parts and then they become homeless. ............................................ As a final note Eleanor Parker only died recently December 9, 2013 of phenomena at the age of 91, sadly I didn't hear anything about it.

6 comments:

Ur-spo said...

hohoho
that is quite a movie review! I enjoyed it.

Sooo-this-is-me said...

I'm glad someone did, maybe a little different than most reviews but I think the villain is much more interesting.

Johnmichael said...

I like this review!

Sooo-this-is-me said...

Why thank you John, if someone watches the movie for the first time, they will think I am on crack lol.

larrymuffin said...

We visited Salzburg for the music festival for many years, quite a beautiful town and not much changed from the years gone by.
In the movie the real life Baroness is in fact a Nazi sympathiser and at the end of the war in 1945 will have lost everything. Max well being gay ends up in a death camp. He could not see it coming. The Von Trapp escape in 1938 so before the war started when the borders where still open, South towards Facist Italy.

Sooo-this-is-me said...

That is so interesting Laurent, thank you for those tidbits. My sister and I have been fans of the movie since we were little kids, we knew nice nuns so we could relate. She will be interested to know this info as well. I saw clips of what happened after they came to the U.S.