The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij
[A] handsomely produced if occasionally rather old-fashioned feeling period drama, which plays like a soap opera in which the characters just happen to have better manners and finery.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Germany, Austria, Switzerland · 2014
3h 0m
Director Dominik Graf
Starring Florian Stetter, Henriette Confurius, Hannah Herzsprung, Ronald Zehrfeld
Genre Drama, History, Romance
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This film, based on the life of German poet Friedrich Schiller, explores his long-term relationships with two sisters, Caroline and Charlotte. While these sisters are raised to marry, their intellect and talents attract the attention of the young poet. As a love triangle evolves, only one can become his wife.
The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij
[A] handsomely produced if occasionally rather old-fashioned feeling period drama, which plays like a soap opera in which the characters just happen to have better manners and finery.
New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme
This film loves its characters, but loves their ideals even more.
A very nearly epic romance, one that approaches the idea of a ménage-a-trois as emblematic of a particular idealism on the part of its participants rather than a hotsy-totsy taboo-busting arrangement.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The result is immersive and intelligent, but not what one would call difficult. Graf’s knack for no-nonsense storytelling means that Beloved Sisters seems to fly past.
Slant Magazine by James Lattimer
It blossoms into a breezily utopian depiction of a ménage á trois whose entirely matter-of-fact presentation sets up an intriguing dissonance with the prim period setting.
[Graf's] handsomely mounted, beautifully acted epic biopic (running just shy of three hours) succeeds in reducing the lives of three important figures in German literary history to a rather banal love triangle.
Never works up a romantic head of steam, never captures the frisson and ferment of a tumultuous age. And, thanks to the flat depiction of Schiller, Beloved Sisters never overcomes the feeling that it’s a lecture, with a little rough and ready German sex tossed in, here and there, to wake up the class.
An enthralling, gorgeously mounted depiction of the complicated relationship between the post-Enlightenment writer and philosopher Friedrich Schiller and the sisters Charlotte von Lengefeld (who would become his wife) and Caroline von Beulwitz (his eventual biographer).
Village Voice by Stephanie Zacharek
Although there's nothing sensationalistic about his approach, [Graf] treats the characters' tentative, often problematic bohemianism as a wild, brave, and precious thing, and the lead actors — restrained where it counts and bold where it matters — are a pleasure to watch.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
With its dearth of substance and its wandering focus, this is a middlebrow bodice-ripper posing as an epic that hasn’t the foggiest idea of what it wants to say.
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