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Antonia's Line (Original title: Antonia) is a 1995 Dutch feminist film written and directed by Marleen Gorris. The film, described as a "feminist fairy tale", tells the story of the independent Antonia (Willeke van Ammelrooy) who, after returning to the anonymous Dutch village of her birth, establishes and nurtures a close-knit matriarchal community. The film covers a breadth of topics, with themes ranging from death and religion to sex, intimacy, lesbianism, friendship and love.

Antonia's Line
German poster
Directed byMarleen Gorris
Produced byGerard Cornelisse
Hans de Weers
Hans de Wolf
Written byMarleen Gorris
Starring
  • Willeke van Ammelrooy
  • Els Dottermans
  • Jan Decleir
  • Marina de Graaf
  • Mil Seghers
Edited byWiebe van der Vliet
Distributed byAsmik Ace Entertainment
Release date
  • 12 September 1995 (1995-09-12) (TIFF)
  • 21 September 1995 (1995-09-21)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryThe Netherlands
LanguageDutch
Budget£1.5 million
Box office$4.2 million

Antonia's Line was made after challenges in finding locations and funding in the 1980s and 1990s. It enjoyed critical success and several awards, including the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 68th Academy Awards.

Screenplay

Following World War II, the widow Antonia and her daughter Danielle arrive at Antonia's home town where her mother is dying. Antonia turns down an offer of marriage from Farmer Bas, but develops a romance with him anyway. She reunites with her old friend Crooked Finger, a depressed intellectual who refuses to leave his house. She also begins attracting a following, including Deedee, a mentally handicapped girl after she is raped by her brother Pitte, and Loony Lips, a simple-minded man who falls in love with Deedee. A pariah, Pitte flees the village.

Danielle, who has a vivid imagination, becomes an artist and expresses interest in raising a child, while rejecting the idea of having a husband. Antonia and Danielle visit the city to find a man to impregnate Danielle, resulting in the birth of Therèse, an unusually intelligent girl. Danielle also develops a lesbian relationship with Therèse's tutor. Therèse develops an understanding an kinship with Crooked Finger beyond what Danielle could be capable of.

Years later, Pitte returns to town to collect his inheritance, and rapes Therèse. Antonia places a curse on him, after which he is drowned. Therèse is unable to find her intellectual match but eventually has a relationship with a childhood friend, resulting in her pregnancy. She decides to keep the baby and gives birth to Sarah, the film's narrator who has a fascination with death. Sarah observes many of her elders die off, including Crooked Finger who commits suicide, and Loony Lips who suffers an accident on the farm. Antonia later dies of old age, in the company of friends and family.

  • Willeke van Ammelrooy as Antonia
  • Els Dottermans as Danielle
  • Jan Decleir as Farmer Bas
  • Victor Löw as Harry
  • Johan Heldenbergh as Tom
  • Dora van der Groen as Allegonde
  • Veerle van Overloop as Thérèse
  • Esther Vriesendorp as Thérèse (aged 13)
  • Carolien Spoor as Thérèse (aged 6)
  • Thyrza Ravesteijn as Sarah
  • Mil Seghers as Kromme Vinger (also called Crooked Finger)
  • Elsie de Brauw as Lara
  • Reinout Bussemaker as Simon
  • Marina de Graaf as Deedee
  • Jan Steen as Lippen Willem (also called Loony Lips)
  • Catherine ten Bruggencate as Malle Madonna (also called Mad Madonna)
  • Paul Kooij as Protestant
 
Director Marleen Gorris wrote the screenplay and won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

Director and screenwriter Marleen Gorris envisioned the story as distinct from her previous work, such as A Question of Silence (1982), which she referred to as "indictments against society". She referred to Antonia as "a celebration of life", incorporating fairy tale elements and cruel details. Gorris finished the screenplay in 1988. However, making the film took three attempts, with challenges stemming from putting together a large cast and finding a village that could be portrayed as realistic for a 50-year period. It was eventually filmed in Belgium.

Another major challenge was finding investors. Funding ultimately came from the Netherlands, Belgium and the UK. With the help of producer Hans de Weers, Gorris found investors and also worked with British producer Judy Counihan of Red Hot Organization. The budget was £1.5 million. Filming finished in November 1994.

Box office

In the U.S., Antonia's Line opened in 99 theatres, and made $1.8 million in its first 10 days. After 164 days, it crossed the $4 million mark.

According to Box Office Mojo, the film completed its run grossing $4,228,275 in North America and $21,046 in South Korea. In the European Union, it had 1,660,901 admissions.

Critical reception

 
Actress Willeke van Ammelrooy received positive reviews and the Golden Calf for Best Actress for her performance.

According to Dutch director Mike van Diem, the film received more positive reviews in the United States than in its native Netherlands, saying "We thought it was a good film, but nobody thought it was that good". Dutch writer Hans Kroon suggested the U.S. reception was out of a need for escapism. Roger Ebert gave the film four stars, saying the film showed "the everyday realities of rural life, a cheerful feminism, a lot of easygoing sex and a gallery of unforgettable characters". Emanuel Levy, writing for The Advocate, wrote "It's easy to see why" the film was winning awards in festivals, calling it "an enchanting fairy tale that maintains a consistently warm, lighthearted feel", and Willeke van Ammelrooy wonderful. Janet Maslin of The New York Times called it "a work of magical feminism". Alan A. Stone of the Boston Review called it an "astonishingly beautiful film" representing "a truce in the gender war". Kevin Thomas of The Los Angeles Times said Antonia's Line is "Beautiful, tender, hearty and poetic", and Van Ammelrooy is warm. Conversely, Edward Guthmann of the San Francisco Chronicle called the film "an odd mix of schmaltz and anti-male orneriness" and the character of Antonia a "sour pickle". Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader called it "humorless" "feminist rage".

In his 2002 Movie & Video Guide, Leonard Maltin called it "a treat from start to finish". On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 69%, based on 45 reviews.

Women's studies professor Linda López McAlister commented that "It seems to me that Gorris's accomplishment in this film is to have created a sense of place and characters full of life, full of quirks and idiosyncrasies and peccadillos, full of love, and rage, and desire". Anneke Smelik analyzed the film, writing "It is Oedipal in the sense that it is about a family, but instead of featuring the triangle of father, mother and child, the film establishes a line of mothers and daughters." She goes on to write, "Female desire is represented in all of its diverse manifestations: Antonia's wish for independence, Danielle's quest for artistic creativity, Therèse's pursuit of knowledge, and Sarah's curiosity about life in general".

Accolades

Antonia's Line won the 1996 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, the Toronto International Film Festival People's Choice award, and two Nederlands Film Festival Golden Calf awards. Gorris also won for Best Director at the Hamptons International Film Festival and Best Screenplay at the Chicago International Film Festival.

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
Academy Awards 25 March 1996 Best Foreign Language Film Marleen Gorris Won
BAFTA Awards 29 April 1997 Film Not in the English Language Hans de Weers and Marleen Gorris Nominated
Chicago International Film Festival 12–29 October 1995 Best Screenplay Marleen Gorris Won
Audience Choice Award Won
GLAAD Media Award March 1997 Outstanding Film– Limited Release Nominated
Hamptons International Film Festival October 1995 Best Director Won
Joseph Plateau Awards 1995 Best Actress Els Dottermans Won
Netherlands Film Festival 20–29 September 1995 Best Director Marleen Gorris Won
Best Actress Willeke van Ammelrooy Won
Toronto International Film Festival 7–16 September 1995 People's Choice Award Marleen Gorris Won
  • List of submissions to the 68th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film
  • List of Dutch submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

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