The Nightingale

The Nightingale The Nightingale
Clare, eine junge irische Strafgefangene, jagt einen britischen Offizier durch die raue tasmanische Wildnis und ist auf Rache aus, weil der Mann einen schrecklichen Gewaltakt gegen ihre Familie verübt hat. Unterwegs nimmt sie die Dienste des. The Nightingale – Schrei nach Rache (Originaltitel: The Nightingale) ist ein australischer Western von Jennifer Kent, die hierbei Regie führte, das Drehbuch. Entdecke die Filmstarts Kritik zu "The Nightingale - Schrei nach Rache" von Jennifer Kent: Drei brutale Vergewaltigungen und zwei nicht minder grausame. The Nightingale - Schrei nach Rache ein Film von Jennifer Kent mit Aisling Franciosi, Sam Claflin. Inhaltsangabe: Anfang des Jahrhunderts lebt die Irin. The Nightingale. ()2 Std. 16 MinX-Ray Tasmanien Für die irische Gefangene Clare ist das Leben in der Strafkolonie die Hölle. Als Leibeigene. Genau hier, in dieser Welt, die eher einer Vorhölle gleicht als der Gründung eines neues Landes, setzt Jennifer Kents The Nightingale an. Mit Gründungsmythen. The Nightingale ist dabei natürlich mehr als nur ein blutiger Rachethriller einer Frau, selbst wenn der Film ungerechtfertigt manchmal darauf.

View all 87 comments. Aug 01, Teodora rated it it was amazing Shelves: on-app , feminism-and-strong-women , books-to-read-in-romanian , favorites , historical.
Even in school, I always thought that this was the most interesting part of the whole history we were taught maybe because our history teacher was a bit obsessed with that period too, who knows.
I want to start talking about this book — The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. I thought I was going to love this so much as I di 4. I thought I was going to love this so much as I did with other WWII-plot-based books, but after about pages it was something about it that to me felt incomplete.
And I was fairly disappointed. I am not being mean. I am only being honest. French suffered more in the war then seeing the Germans drinking their French wine really, but after all, everyone suffered big time in that war, including Germany if you believe it or not.
It was war, no one got out of there looking richer or more beautiful or smarter. And this is an universally approved fact.
Because things changed dramatically after more than half of boring and slow description and half-actions. It is a great way to construct a novel, it gives it a bit of fluidity and a sense of emotional connection.
It shows that the same very person can live as many and as different lives in the real life. It is a fascinating narrative perspective.
And giving the fact that at the end the whole idea comes with a twist it makes it even more special.
It is heart-felt. War is dangerous, but even so, those women back then chose to sneak around the so-called law forced upon them, look the danger in the eyes and smile.
And this is what makes them greater than they think they could be. Those two sisters in the book, Vianne and Isabelle, are as different one from another as Mars and Neptun.
What this war thought the two sisters is that they need to fight their own fight along with the others in order to get through — and the ways to do it are dangerous and unimaginable, almost impossible.
The book was a mixture of amazing persons with beautiful and courageous hearts put in the wrong place at the wrong time, alongside wicked people with poisoned minds and hearts.
And also, what an amazing character Captain Wolfgang Beck was? Beck really was put there to show the world that not all good guys are good guys and definitely not all bad ones are as bad as they are shown to be.
Black is the night when its sky is moonless, but, after all, everyone knows the stars are still there. It shows us the horrors of a loveless world and it reminds us to love each other any and every day.
Just a thought, but, coincidence or not, the idea was, after all, very cleverly put together. View all 19 comments.
Teodora Laetitia wrote: " Teodora No problem. Hope you enjoy when you get to read it. Teodora Dean the Bibliophage wrote: "Brilliant review!
Aug 27, AM. Apr 24, Cindy rated it it was amazing. Hannah writes so descriptively that it made me enjoy the journey and really painted the atmosphere of France.
Each line was rich in detail and you could tell had been researched. What would have made me fully embrace the book is if both romances had been developed better and the characterization had bee 4.
What would have made me fully embrace the book is if both romances had been developed better and the characterization had been stronger.
I also think if the book is going to focus on women during WW2, Hannah could have emphasized the sister relationship better instead of making them disjointed for most of the story even if just thinking about the other sister or showing memories of them throughout the book.
Since the romance wasn't that well-developed we could have used that time for the sister relationship instead to really hone in on the theme and purpose of this book.
Nonetheless, I still enjoyed this book and its beautiful writing. View all 6 comments. Mar 02, NReads marked it as to-read. View all 27 comments.
Mar 09, Aestas Book Blog rated it it was amazing Shelves: favorites. This book was absolutely epic! A sweeping, breathtaking journey that captivated me from the first page with the strength and beauty of the writing.
Truly an unforgettable story! The Nightingale has a 4. The ending was so powerful that I read the last 10 pages with tears pouring down my face and days after finishing my read, I still can't stop thinking about it.
I will say upfront though that this book was a little different than the kinds I usually read and review though because it wasn't solely focused on a love story, even though there were two love stories within it.
While men endure great hardship during war, it affects everyone. This is the often-unspoken story of women's war. Mothers, daughter, sisters, wives So many of them didn't just wait for their men to return but took many grave risks to save as many other lives as they could.
We begin the story in with an old woman towards the end of her life, moving out of her house into a retirement home. Without much of a future ahead of her, she begins to look backward at her past, taking us with her through her life story beginning in France , right before the war changed her peaceful life.
The flash back segments of the book are largely focused on two sisters: the older Vianne, the rule follower, and the younger Isabelle, the rebel.
Vianne's idealic life in the countryside with her husband, Antoine, who she'd been in love with since she was fourteen and their young daughter, Sophie, was changed when he was to be mobilized and called to duty to fight in WW2.
The postman became a soldier overnight, and the man she loved was sent to the front, leaving her behind not knowing what the future would bring.
He stood up slowly and took her in his arms. She wanted to bottle how safe she felt in this moment, so she could drink of it later when loneliness and fear left her parched What was love when put up against war.
Months into her husband's deployment, with no word still from him and with their already-dire situation getting worse and worse after France surrendered to Germany, Vianne and Sophie's lives are once again changed when a young German officer requisitions their home, making it his own.
Faced with one hardship after another, they both do everything they can to survive, and pray for Antoine's safe return. My mother would demand the same, and, in truth, she scares me more than my general.
She had no idea how to respond to this stranger who dressed like the enemy and looked like a young man she might have met at church… He remained where he was, a respectful distance from her.
Her outspoken and rebellious nature unwilling to bow to their rules. When the war comes though, she makes her way through the wilderness to Paris.
Her beloved city was like a once-beautiful courtesan grown old and thin, weary, abandoned by her lovers.
In less than a year, this magnificent city had been stripped of its essence by the endless clatter of German jackboots on the streets and disfigured by swastikas that flew from every monument.
Refusing to accept France's surrender, and despite her sister's pleading to stay quiet and safe, she follows her heart and meets a young man named Gaetan.
She falls in love with him and his belief that the French can fight the Nazis from within France. But when things take an unexpected turn, she decides to take matters into her own hands, regardless of what anyone tells her she can't do, and joins an underground group, The Resistance, that risks their lives to make a difference and help save as many others as they can.
On this cool October morning, her life would change. From the morning she boarded this train… she would no longer be the girl in the bookshop… From now on, she was Juliette Gervaise, code name the Nightingale.
You know that feeling when a book is so absorbing that you just want to cancel all your plans so you can keep reading it Yeah, that was me with this book!
Once I started reading, I could barely put it down until I'd reached the last page. As the past and present storylines began to entwine, these shivers ran down me as certain reveals were brought into the light.
Real shivers. Tears would spring to my eyes with even the simplest of things -- but ones that had such a hugely powerful impact on the story.
A letter from Paris. I hope that you can find strength in me, too, V. That because of me, you will find a way to be strong.
Hold my daughter tightly tonight, and tell her that somewhere far away, her papa is thinking of her. And tell her I will return.
I love you. It doesn't need to be. The things that happen, and they way they are told are so powerful that you FEEL them.
There are some scenes though that are hard to read because they are quite painful and I'll warn that there may be triggers for some people, but then again, this is a story that takes place during a brutal war.
There's everything you can expect from such a story -- brutal firefights, prison camps, beatings, near starvation, sacrifice As I neared the end of the book, during the last few pages, tears began to pour down my face.
It was achingly beautiful. Many of you will be wondering if there is a happy ending. I don't want to give things away, but I want you to know that I was completely okay with this ending.
It's naturally not all sunshine and roses, how can it be with such a setting? But my gut feeling tells me that even hard-core romance fans will still love this book.
I was moved to tears several times, but in many ways my heart was healed. It's extraordinarily vivid and evocative. This was my first book by her and I felt like I was right there with these characters -- not only were their emotions so strongly conveyed, but the picture of their surroundings came to life before my eyes.
I have searched for years without luck for a book that could even come close to comparing to my all-time favorite book, The Bronze Horseman more into here.
The story is vastly different — while The Bronze Horseman completely revolved around one love story that was the driving force behind the entire trilogy, The Nightingale was focused on two sisters and their experiences surviving the war -- while the sisters each had their own love stories, it was their personal journeys that this book was focused on.
This was honestly one of the most powerful stories I've read. It will stay in my heart, I know this for a fact.
More than anything, what I take away from it is gratitude They are precious. This book reminded me of that. Standalone novel. They rebuild their family and eventually begin a new life together in America although you do not see this in detail, it is implied.
Isabelle's rebellious nature and choice to risk her life to save others eventually gets her caught towards the end of the book. She is beaten almost to death and thrown into a camp.
She survives this only barely. When the war is over, she returns home and is reunited with her love, Gaetan. She dies in his arms without regrets for the choices that led her there.
The ending of the book is a hugely emotional reunion in for the survivors of the war. View all 48 comments. Apr 16, MomToKippy rated it it was ok Shelves: ww2.
For me this was a fusion of sub-literary chick lit and WWII fiction in that it was too cliche and melodramatic much of the time.
I thought the female perspective of occupied France and the tales of the resistance as well as the opposing sisters' perspectives were generally good ideas but the whole thing lacked in the execution.
The tone of the book doesn't feel authentic to the time period and there are numerous unbelievable incidents and interactions.
The historical facts are covered but the atm For me this was a fusion of sub-literary chick lit and WWII fiction in that it was too cliche and melodramatic much of the time.
The historical facts are covered but the atmosphere and characters feel too modern. There are just too many dialogue and behavioral anachronisms.
It's as if the the history had been researched only superficially and the rest filled in by the author's imagination with caricatures and stereotypes.
Sorry but I think Hannah's fans deserve better. View all 74 comments. Sep 21, Chelsea Humphrey rated it it was amazing Shelves: suspenseful-clues-and-thrilling-rev , favorites.
I'm not sure what I can say about this book that hasn't already been said, but the quality and sheer excellence to this story blew my mind.
I'm not typically a fan of historical fiction, which is likely why I've avoided it for so long, but once this was described to me as "historical fiction light" I felt it was safe to take a gamble on it.
C I'm not sure what I can say about this book that hasn't already been said, but the quality and sheer excellence to this story blew my mind.
Sure there was romance, but I'm talking the love for a people, the love for a country, and the love for fighting for all that is good and right.
It'll be awhile before I can pick up another emotional read because I don't know how I'll recover from this one! Please, even if like me you steer clear of historical fiction and love stories, do yourself a favor and pick this up.
View all 34 comments. Sep 23, Irina rated it it was amazing. This novel was everything that I wanted in a historical fiction.
I don't know how to express what I feel right now. This book is a must read for everyone. View all 9 comments. Mar 21, Lala BooksandLala rated it it was ok.
We all know I shouldn't have even tried to read this. This novel, many times bestseller in France 1. It seems oh so ironic to me to find so many similarities between The Nightingale and La bicyclette bleue, , because, you know, I'm resilient, but reading the same story is starting to get old.
As for Gone with the Wind 's parts, there's none here as far as I'm concerned. Both authors of these WWII novels must have used the same inspirations is all - especially real testimonies, surely.
Yet it throws me off, even if I didn't even like La bicyclette bleue, - I'm not a fan, but I can't forget the plot either, and Kristin Hannah 's characters don't strike me as interesting enough to follow the same storyline again.
I just don't. They seem very flat and unrealistic to me? Oh, and you know what else throws me off? The shameless lack of any researches about the world.
Anachronisms everywhere. Antoine is a postman, alright? In his salary should be around francs per year. As for Vianne, as a teacher, she could pretend to francs, tops.
Tell me, really, I need to know how to multiply my funds like that if that's explained later in the book, I apologize. Perhaps it sounds like details to you, and perhaps they are.
But when I read an Historical novel, more than Historical facts I need for the book to carry me away in another time.
So fake, really. Not to mention that I found the writing repetitive and too dramatic, the dialogue awkward and way too much telling rather than showing.
Wasted potential, sadly. They do have the curse words right, though. Unbelievable - like the whole thing, apparently. View all 67 comments. Dec 24, Elyse Walters rated it really liked it Shelves: holocaust-themes , historical-fiction , overly-popular , germany , france.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. I'm late to the party But here goes: "The Nightingale" begins with an unnamed elderly woman as the narrator.
She is living in Oregon, and the year is Her son is helping her move She insists that she must bring her old- large- trunk that she kept stored in the attic.
In the truck contains 'past memories'. As the story transports to France, , we are wondering about Jul I'm late to the party As the story transports to France, , we are wondering about Juliette Gervaise We meet the Rosingal sisters: Vianne and Isabelle.
Their personalities are different. Vianne is 10 years older, married with a child Her husband is sent off to war. Isabel has just been been kicked out of - yet another- boarding school.
She is 18 at the start.. So, Isabel knows her dad is not going to be very happy to have her back home. When the Germans invade Paris, her father sends Isabelle to live with Vianne.
As a result of the Nazi occupation, a German soldier is stationed at Vianne's house And Isabelle ends up going back to Paris because her attitude, defiance, and rebellion, is putting Vivianne and her daughter Sophie in danger.
Isabelle and Vianne both have different perspectives and reactions to the injustices of war. They both are standing for what they believe is right, they both have courage, and both show compassion in different ways.
Through the storytelling -we see how the Nazi's treated France and what police officers did to their own French people- especially 'all' Jews.
The roundups, the hiding, and the deportations. The real emotional impact of "The Nightingale", is towards the end of the book.
It's hard not to 'feel' something Yet parts did not feel authentic to me I think I'm the rare bird with this novel. View all 57 comments.
Apr 20, Mandy rated it it was amazing. I don't even know where to start this review. I am typing it through teary eyes, so I will keep it simple.
Let's see if Hollywood takes my suggestion! This WW2 novel was so beautifully written. This war was a time of bitter hatred and in this story Kristin Hannah brings to life love, survival, bitterness, strength, and persistence.
Vianne and Isab I don't even know where to start this review. Vianne and Isabelle are the most outstanding characters I've ever read.
It would be an honor to know them if they were real. I have so much more I could add but I will not because it would take so much of my review.
This is a story that will make you cry and have hope in believing that if you keep stepping forward and never looking back you will make it.
I highly recommend this book. It's absolutely wonderful and a gorgeous story. I will cherish it always as it is now one of my top 3 favorites : I'm looking forward to this movie becoming a film.
I will be there opening night : in the front row!!! View all 72 comments. The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah Heartbreaking.
Really heartbreaking. This book is absolutely raw and real and heartbreakingly beautiful. And learned a lot about World War 2. If I have learned anything in this long life of mine, it is this: in love, we find out who we want to be; in war, we find out who we are Loved it View all 10 comments.
March 10, Full Review…. October 2, Full Review…. View All Critic Reviews Aug 03, My mother, resenting the limitations of the housewife role, enrolled in college, and woke up to the manipulative and damaging effects of the patriarchy.
As the youngest of eight children whose parents divvied up family chores according to strict gender lines, I saw right through the ridiculous role-playing exercises our society demanded of us.
Boys would take out the garbage and mow the lawn while the girls would set the table and do the dishes.
One day, one of my sisters turned to my father and said, "Dad, I wasn't born with a dishwashing gene. She's right! My world has been turned upside down!
Chores don't come with genitals! I consider myself so lucky to not have to struggle with this issue and to be able to see the world through this lens.
Jennifer Kent, who made a splash with her debut thriller, The Babadook, understands how to present feminism on film with her brutal, unblinking, unforgiving, follow-up, The Nightingale.
She spares no details and never looks away in this excessively and rightfully violent revenge saga driven by female rage.
Set in Tasmania, then called Van Diemen's Land, in , the film drops us into the English colonization period where European prisoners were sent over into a life of indentured servitude.
An Irish family, Clare Aisling Franciosi , her sweet husband Aidan Michael Sheasby and their baby, live in service to Lieutenant Hawkins a scarily convincing Sam Claflin , a sadistic, abusive man who refuses to keep his promise and set the family free.
Forced to drudge work and occasionally trotted out in front of the troops to regale them with her beautiful singing voice, Clare begs for her freedom and suffers violently for it.
Things get much worse when Aidan attempts to reason with the Lieutenant, leading Clare on a mission to seek revenge against Hawkins, who has fled North to gain a promotion.
Unable to find anyone to voluntarily help her on her quest, Clare hires Billy first time natural Baykali Ganambarr , an Aboriginal whose population has been enslaved or killed.
The bulk of the film follows them as they risk their lives with every step through the Australian forests. Through them we experience their differing experiences of subjugation at the hands of white men.
Her singing voice notwithstanding, Clare presents herself as a fierce, tight-jawed warrior throughout. Unafraid to point her gun at Billy, she orders him around in the manner so many of the oppressed have done historically.
When there's someone lower in stature, humans naturally gravitate to overpower them. In this case, Clare does so for her survival.
Despite their relationship growing closer as the story progresses, Clare disturbingly forces Billy at gunpoint to march in front of her when they cross paths with a group of white slaveholders.
Either way, this pairing appropriately lacks even a hint of sentimentality, and the film excels because of it. Clare's gender has left her destined to a life of violent assault whereas the color of Billy's skin has put him on the outside looking in at his own homeland, his entire culture decimated.
Although careful not to equivocate the pairs' experiences, together, they form an inspiring, anger-fueled resistance. By the end, in a perfect final moment, you feel the effects of the connection they forged.
Franciosi has a fierce, fearless Jennifer Lawrence quality to her acting. She's powerful, focused, unexpected and intense throughout.
It's a perfect marriage of actor, director and theme, all united to convey the step-by-step agony of living in a white man's world.
Ganambarr's performance feels timeless, even current as he laments the life he's lost and the beautiful society he helped create. I didn't love The Babadook.
I admired the performances and the directing, but I felt the horror elements came across a little undercooked. I wanted much bigger set pieces.
Still, Kent knows how to build a sense of dread and despair with her fluid, gripping sense of style. With her new film, she abandons almost everything we've seen from her to serve this particular story.
The Nightingale feels like it was made in the time period presented. With minimal camera movement and a square aspect ratio, Kent, using her cinematographer Radek Ladczuk once again, keeps things very, very simple.
It works so effectively in forcing the audience to feel every moment. The violence in the film, and yes, it's horrific, goes on much longer than an audience may feel comfortable, and that's the point.
Rape is no joke. Murder isn't entertaining. The sounds of a baby crying or a woman screaming or a husband pleading for his wife's life must be heard for what they are, and Kent won't let her audience off the hook.
A short fantasy sequence gives us echoes of her prior film's haunting style, but for the most part, Kent employs bold, simple technique.
She wants nothing to dull the impact. With these two films, Kent has established herself as a genre tweaker. By the end, I felt assaulted, wrung out, yet still filled with a sense of hope.
Despite references to The Searchers, Kent has her own unique take on a Western style story. She doesn't deconstruct them like Clint Eastwood did with Unforgiven, but she has something to say.
Those in power will always try to divide and conquer. The oppressed can only overcome if they unite. We can do much better in a world not ruled solely by white men.
If this sounds highly relevant to the here and now, it's no accident. The Nightingale will haunt your dreams and the waking nightmare we're all currently experiencing.
Glenn G Super Reviewer. See all Audience reviews. There are no approved quotes yet for this movie. Best Horror Movies. Worst Superhero Movies.
Best Netflix Series and Shows. Go back. More trailers. We Are Who We Are. Filthy Rich. She is eventually captured, and after her father falsely confesses to being the Nightingale to save her, she is sent to a concentration camp in Germany.
She undergoes hellish conditions at the camp but survives long enough to see the end of the war. She makes her way to Vianne, and they reconcile.
The book concludes with the elderly narrator, revealed to be Vianne, receiving an invitation to an event in Paris to remember her sister, "The Nightingale".
She travels with her son Julien, who is unaware of his family's activities during the war and his true parentage.
After the event, Vianne reunites with Ari, and she comes to peace with her memories of the war. The characters in The Nightingale are not themselves real people, though some of their actions are based on real historical figures.
Also like Isabelle, de Jongh was captured late in the war and sent to the Ravensbrück concentration camp rather than executed, as the Nazis disbelieved her assertion that she was herself the organizer of the route.
However, de Jongh lived on long after the war, becoming a countess in and eventually dying in , whereas in the novel Isabelle dies shortly after being freed from the camp.
The story of De Jongh also inspired Hannah to conduct further research and found stories during the French Resistance about women who were willing to put their lives and their children at risk in order to shelter Jewish families; this became the inspiration for Vianne's character in the book.
Reviews of the book were generally positive. Still, a respectful and absorbing page-turner. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirected from The Nightingale novel.
Retrieved 28 May Retrieved
The Quiet Ones Alles, was der The Nightingale Clare noch bleibt, ist Rache und so nimmt in der tasmanischen Wildnis die Verfolgung auf. Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user The Nightingale data Play Store Passwort Vergessen analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. Inmitten dieses Wahnsinns befindet sich die verurteilte und damit Xbox 360 Spiele Auf Xbox One Spielen rechtelose Irin Clare Aisling Serien Stream Jerks mitsamt Ehemann und Baby. Statt Horror ist es dieses Mal das rape-revenge -Genre. Clare ist Freiwild. Calvaire Madness Inside Me This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website.The Nightingale Commentaires Video
Handel - The cuckoo and the nightingale (Organ concertos)
The Nightingale spielt , also mitten in der australischen Kolonialzeit und zeigt schonungslos die Brutalitäten jener Zeit. Tasmanien Für die junge irische Gefangene Clare ist das Leben in der australischen Strafkolonie die Hölle. Als Leibeigene von Leutnant Hawkins ist sie. In ihrem Film „The Nightingale“ erzählt Regisseurin Jennifer Kent eine grausame Geschichte aus dem Australien der er Jahre. Without food or money or hope, as danger escalates all around them, she is forced to make one impossible choice after another to keep her Bambola alive. Trivia Dakota Fanning and Elle Fanning are real life sisters. Herr Captain Beck made me really uncomfortable — whenever he helped Vianne and her daughter, I felt exactly as torn as she felt. Clarisse Loughrey. As the story transports to France,we are wondering about Jul I'm late to the party One day, one of my Endless Love Stream Deutsch turned to my father and said, "Dad, I wasn't Frank Zane with a dishwashing gene. Holiday Movie Guide USA Today. Best Editing. Three paragraphs later she is about to cross through a peaceful checkpoint when inexplicably the German guard begins machine gunning everyone as if he got bored just checking Jake Lloyd
Log Line. Eine absolute Empfehlung!! Alles, was der traumatisierten Clare noch bleibt, ist Rache und so nimmt in der tasmanischen Wildnis Bambola Verfolgung auf. Schade aber, dass sie mit der Figur des Billy hier doch wieder in eine uralte, kolonialistische Falle tritt. Clare ist Schwarzer Kanal. These cookies do not store any personal information. Besser spät als nie, würden manche behaupten.
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