Bride Flight

Susan Granger’s review of “Bride Flight” (Music Box Films)

   

    Inspired by the true story of the 1953 “Last Great Air Race,” this is the fictionalized tale of a trio of young, Dutch women who, eager to escape from the flooding in post-WWII Holland, emigrate on a 13,000-mile historic KLM flight from London, England, to Christchurch, New Zealand, for what they envision as a better life.

    Shy, farm-raised Ada (Karina Smulders) is already pregnant by the fiancé she met only once but during turbulence on the plane she seeks solace with Frank (Waldemar Torenstra), a rancher whose family died in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. Ada dutifully marries her fanatically pious Mennonite fiancé (Micha Hulsof), living in a bunker and bearing him several children but, over the years, her unhappiness grows, and she stealthily maintains secret correspondence with Frank, who now has a vineyard.

    Feisty, chain-smoking Esther (Anna Drijver) is an aspiring fashion designer whose Jewish family was killed during the Holocaust.  She’s distressed to discover that her strict fiancé insists that she keep a kosher kitchen and observe all religious customs, so that marriage is doomed. Besides, she’s also pregnant by another man.  Then there’s earthy Marjorie (Elise Schaap), who yearns for children but discovers that she cannot bear them. So Esther gives her biological child to Marjorie and her husband, but she never relinquishes that son from her heart, feeling guilty because he’s not being raised with knowledge of his Jewish heritage.

    Directed by Ben Sombogaart from a cliché-drenched screenplay by Marieke van der Pol, it’s a decade-spanning, multi-generational melodrama, as the intertwined lives of the three, now-70 year-old women cross once again at Frank’s funeral – and each reaches her own resolution and redemption. The older trio is played by Pleuni Touw, Willeke van Ammelrooy and Petra Laseur with Rutger Hauer appearing in a cameo as Frank. Years ago, this kind of chick flick would be called a “weepie.”

    In Dutch with English subtitles, on the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, “Bride Flight” is an engrossing, if sudsy 6, a nostalgic glimpse into tangled destinies.

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