Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Suicides are proliferating in the city -- is the song to blame, or is it the tenor of the times?
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Germany, Hungary · 1999
1h 52m
Director Rolf Schübel
Starring Erika Marozsán, Joachim Król, Ben Becker, Stefano Dionisi
Genre Drama, Romance
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András, a pianist who is hired to play in a local restaurant, falls in love with Ilona, a waitress. The fragile balance of the erotic ménage à trois is sent further off kilter when two other men fall in love with Ilona. As a profession of his love, András composes a piece with a melancholic melody that eventually triggers a chain of suicides and he and Ilona must confront this mystery.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Suicides are proliferating in the city -- is the song to blame, or is it the tenor of the times?
The iconic '30s song "Gloomy Sunday" gets a distinctive celluloid setting in this well-played, cleverly scripted pic in which music and character are inextricably combined.
Village Voice by Edward Crouse
Dissolving four characters' lives into the dank smoke of the bitterest of torch songs, Gloomy Sunday fashions an apocryphal, pretty, and somewhat pat biography of the title ballad.
The Holocaust subplot is contrived and schematic. Yet the central love triangle is fairly compelling, aided by Krol's fine performance.
Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern
Who knew that one of Billie Holiday's most haunting songs was written in Budapest in the 1930s? I didn't until I saw Gloomy Sunday, a German film, shot in Hungary and directed by Rolf Schubel, that I enjoyed quite a lot, even though it's all over the map in more ways than one.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
A beautiful period piece, set against one of the world's glorious cities, adding poignancy. Twists and turns heighten a gradually accruing effect, building to a risky moment of truth, a coup de théâtre that is as daring as it is satisfying.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Long on atmosphere and Old World charm.
Gloomy Sunday's success in transcending its own clichés and conventionality -- at least until the morose finale -- is due in part to the story's primal romantic pull, aided by attractive actors who either stare longingly into each other's eyes or cavort in states of undress.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
It's an old-fashioned romantic triangle, told with schmaltzy music on the sound track and a heroine with a smoky singing voice, and then the Nazis turn up and it gets very complicated and heartbreaking.
There's a whiff of exploitation about any movie that claims the Holocaust as a “backdrop,” and Rolf Schübel’s treacly tale of three men lovesick for the same blue-eyed beauty fairly reeks of it.
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