DVD Review: Gloomy Sunday

Gloomy Sunday takes its title from the song of the same name, made popular during the '30s and '40s (in the U.S., it came to prominence as a hit for Billie Holiday). Its brooding melody and dark, lovelorn lyrics were rumored to have had a fatal impact on many despondent lovers. Because of this it become known as the 'Hungarian Suicide Song.' It appears the moniker was largely exaggerated, but because of this it retained a dark history, culminating with the suicide of the actual composer in 1968.

The story for Gloomy Sunday marries the legend of the song with a background setting of World War II. At the beginning of the film we meet Laszlo, who is a successful Jewish restaurateur. Laszlo runs his establishment with his hostess and girlfriend, the beautiful Ilona. Ilona's beauty draws in and seduces many of the regulars at the restaurant, including their new pianist, Andras. As Ilona becomes involved with both men, they eventually learn to come to terms with their strained but mutually beneficial love triangle.

As things have a way of doing, they quickly become more complicated. One night Laszlo saves the life of a young German visitor who, after becoming so distraught from a mild rejection from Ilona, tries to take his life by jumping off a bridge. Laszlo pulls him from the river and nurses him back to health. Later in the story, the man returns to the city, only this time as a high-ranking officer of the Third Reich who has been assigned there as part of the occupation of Hungary.

At the same time, Andras gains notoriety for one of his compositions played at the restaurant. Originally penned as an ode to Ilona, the instrumental piece soon gains nationwide attention after being discovered by record company executives visiting the restaurant. However, after reports begin pouring in of its connection with a recent wave of suicides in the country, it begins to attract the wrong kind of attention for both him and the restaurant.

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Article Author: David R Perry

Lost somewhere in the rolling hills of Tennessee, David R Perry can occasionally be found doing dark, unspeakable things to words. Printed words, spoken words, electronically mangled words... really any kind but twittered words.

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