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The Notebook

Play trailer Poster for The Notebook R Released Aug 29, 2014 1h 50m Drama War Play Trailer Watchlist
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66% Tomatometer 35 Reviews 67% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
Twin brothers, who were sent to live with their abusive grandmother during World War II, learn how to manipulate people.
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The Notebook

Critics Reviews

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Ty Burr Boston Globe The relentless calamity becomes a grind, offering few insights beyond ones that are obvious in the first half hour. Oct 2, 2014 Full Review Kate Taylor Globe and Mail In adapting the novel, Szasz and screenwriters Tom Abrams and Andras Szeker tread carefully, leaving a lot to the imagination ... Rated: 3/4 Sep 26, 2014 Full Review Tirdad Derakhshani Philadelphia Inquirer A bleak, despairing testament to the cruelty of war, and how it mangles and defaces everyone it touches. Rated: 3/4 Sep 26, 2014 Full Review Nicholas Bell IONCINEMA.com It's a strikingly photographed, pervasively bewitching account of adolescent twin boys and their development into (mostly) apathetic killing machines. Rated: 3.5/5 Sep 5, 2019 Full Review Mattie Lucas From the Front Row It certainly paints a grim picture, but if war is hell, so is this film. Rated: 2/4 Aug 7, 2019 Full Review Stephen Saito Moveable Fest As little emotion as the two boys show as the film wears on, Szasz actually shows less, finding a way to show the dehumanizing experience of living in wartime without ever going beyond the pale. Nov 22, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (19) audience reviews
georgan g Actually, 3 & 1/4 stars. Horrible to watch, yet a reminder why war is the absolute depths of human depravity. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member This film hits you between the eyes. Some scenes are the kind that never really leave the brain. I am left with the reminder of the horrors of war and the way that this reality deeply changes the DNA of people and their future generations. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member I don't get what the deal is with the low ratings as this is a very good movie, unless maybe it's all people who read the book and felt this wasn't adequate. Perhaps it was too real for them? Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member Budapest-born director János Szász won Special Mention at both the Chicago and Haifa International Film Festivals in 2013 for his WWII-drama THE NOTEBOOK, which was also selected as the Hungarian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards. Adapted from the celebrated 1986 novel Le Grand Cahier by Ágota Kristóf, the first in a trilogy which won her the European prize for French literature, The Notebook tells a haunting tale of the perils of wartime and the disintegration of innocence into ruthless impassivity and human induration. Lászlo and András Gyémánt play a pair of thirteen year-old twins, jolted from the cradling of their parents' storge into a mélange of brutality, when their mother (Gyöngyvér Bognár) one day decides to take them to the dirt-poor countryside to be taken care by their grandmother (Piroska Molnar), as the Nazi occupation has made the city too perilous to live in. Instantaneously the twins know hell has just begun for them as their grandmother, known to locals as "the Witch", makes no bones about her abusive and alcoholic behavior, calling them "bastards" and locking them out until they complete their laborious chores. Left without any news about their parents from then on, they only have a few parting words from their mother, telling them to continue learning and studying no matter what, and a notebook from their father (Ulrich Matthes), asking them to record every single thing that happens to them. And so their harrowing tale is told through their entries in their notebook, taking form in scrapbook scribblings, photos and pasted objects. Szász intends to deposit audience into the crumbling world of the twins, as we follow their journey facing the brutality of mankind during wartime. It begins with the boys merely trying to live each day by holding on to their parents' words close at heart, to continuously learn, study and capture everything in their notebook. Equipped with only the bible to study, they end up mastering the Ten Commandments and the rest of their lessons would have to come from real life experiences. Two coddled and empty vessels stranded amidst wartime's desperation, their logics are constantly challenged and they start to steel themselves to the brutal new world through a series of disturbing methods. They still want to learn, but their lessons rapidly morph into survival skills mastered through an array of calculated afflictions which some will prove more disturbing than shocking. A rather competent performance by both the Gyémánt brothers, they manage to tiptoe gracefully along the borders between bravery and savage, between callous and ruthless. Hedging their survival on the "new skills" they acquire, their journey intertwines with a string of strangers all proving to be more for the purpose of provoking rather than anything purposeful. That is my slight issue with the film. You'd be surprised with the number of lecherous souls they would encounter, from a harelip neighbor (Orsolya Toth), a pedophiliac Nazi officer (Ulrich Thomsen), to a corrupted priest (Péter Andorai) and finally a pro-Nazi maid who engages the boys in a bizarre masturbation scene. There seems to be a central key note which remains rather overlooked based on the reviews that I've encountered of this film. In fact, it is to me evinced at the very beginning (a calming scene of the twins sleeping head to head like a conjoined twins), throughout as an undertone (they do everything together and even finish each other's sentences), and finally the ending. I would interpret the almost deadly connection between the brothers as the pivotal message in what Szász is trying to deliver in this 1 hour 52 minutes drama. Culminating in a seemingly abrupt ending (argued by some as incomplete and unexplained), it makes perfect sense to me as it is actually the final lesson the twins are forcing themselves to learn, in their unrelenting quest for survival. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/03/23 Full Review Audience Member Towards the end of World War II, people in big cities are at the mercy of air raids and death by starvation. A desperate young mother leaves her 13-year-old twin sons at their grandmother's house in the country, despite the fact that this grandmother is a cruel and bestial alcoholic. The villagers call her "the Witch" because she is rumored to have poisoned her husband long ago. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Audience Member We are all products of our environment, and if you can't relate to this movie, you are very lucky indeed. Amazing, dark, scary, eyeopening story... Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Notebook

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Twin brothers, who were sent to live with their abusive grandmother during World War II, learn how to manipulate people.
Director
Janos Szasz
Producer
Pal Sandor, Sándor Söth
Screenwriter
András Szekér
Distributor
Sony Pictures Classics
Production Co
Hunnia Films
Rating
R (Disturbing Violent Content|Disturbing Sexual Content|Language|Nudity)
Genre
Drama, War
Original Language
Hungarian
Release Date (Theaters)
Aug 29, 2014, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Dec 1, 2014
Box Office (Gross USA)
$66.2K
Runtime
1h 50m
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