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Ludwig II (2012 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Ludwig II' is a 2012 German-Austrian historical film directed by and , starring as the younger Bavarian King Ludwig II and Sebastian Schipper as the king in his later years.

Plot



Crown Prince Ludwig suffers under the authoritarian education of his father King Maximilian II and does not share at all his militaristic attitude. In addition, because of his love for music and the fine arts, he repeatedly incurs the displeasure of his father. For Ludwig, art is more important than daily bread.

Maximilian II dies unexpectedly of erysipelas, and so Ludwig, full of idealism, ascends the Bavarian throne at the age of 18. In a time when war and poverty are omnipresent, he believes in a better world and wants to use his power to ensure that his people can live in peace and happiness. His kingdom should become a centre of beauty, art and culture should flourish; instead of weapons, Ludwig wants to invest public money in theatre, music and education.

He spends his free time with young Sophie, his cousin and sister of the Austrian Empress Sissi. With her he can philosophise about music and the beauty of the world. Moreover, he has all of his rooms in the castle remodeled and designed according to his ideas.

He loves Richard Wagner's operas, his passion and admiration for his works and their legends are so great that he wants to bring the controversial composer to his court. To achieve this, he instructs the well-known music lover Johann von Lutz to track down Wagner and bring him to him. He awaits the arrival of his idol impatiently and receives him with great respect. He settled Wagner's debts and obtained the pardon of the revolutionary and politically persecuted composer. His ministers rebel against Wagner's expensive sponsorship.

Ludwig throws himself into political business with great interest at first. He initiated a school reform and distributed musical instruments instead of weapons to his young cadets. He is of the opinion that if Bavaria should ever be attacked, Richard Wagner's music will sound against them, which would immediately disarm them. Even a conversation with his cousin Elisabeth of Austria, who wants to ask him for help in preventing Prussia from waging war against Austria, fails because of his naive way of thinking that music alone is capable of keeping people's hearts at peace move.

Ludwig's ministers are not satisfied with the power that Wagner's ideas seem to have over the young king. The young king increasingly neglects the affairs of government. The news of an impending war reaches him while he is on the road with Wagner in the Bavarian mountains. The composer suggests that he replace the ministers who now want to go to war. They in turn threaten to resign from their positions if Ludwig does not part with Wagner and his influence. Since the king fears for his friend's life, he urges him to leave Bavaria. He realises that the circumstances of the time are against him and his beloved kingdom gets involved in the war with Prussia against his will. Resigned and showing signs of the first delusional illnesses, Ludwig withdraws from public life.

The news of the defeat of his army hits him hard, since he spent the money that was intended for modern rifles on musical instruments. His stable master Richard Hornig is at his side willing to support him, but Ludwig does not want to admit his affection for men. In order to deal with the war defeat, he travels his country and shows himself to his people. Moreover, he plans his wedding with Sophie because he is convinced that the people expect this from him. As part of the wedding preparations, Wagner also arrives at court again to take over the musical design. On this occasion Ludwig meets the young singer Heinrich Vogel, whom he wants to hear singing as Lohengrin, with which he incurs Wagner's displeasure.

Sophie demands a proof of love in the form of a kiss from her future husband. This leads to a scandal, and Ludwig cancels his already planned and longed-for wedding because he realises that he cannot have more than friendship with his fiance (due to his homosexuality, which he does not confess to her or to others). In a letter he asks Sophie's forgiveness and understanding. In his opinion, she has the right to be happy, which she would not succeed at his side in the long run.

In addition to these private problems, political events are catching up with him again. Bavaria's defeat by Prussia forces the country to enter the 1870-71 war against France as a compulsory ally of Otto von Bismarck. Bismarck's efforts to create an all-German empire headed by an emperor destroys the dream for a sovereign Bavarian kingdom to continue to exist. Ludwig's brother Otto suffers a nervous breakdown and has to be taken to a sanatorium. The attending physician assumes that Otto will not wake up from his mental derangement. Ludwig promises his brother to build him a castle where he can be who he is, exactly as he also longs himself to have a place where he can be who he is. With this in mind, he had Neuschwanstein Castle built.

Nevertheless, Ludwig does not come to rest: the abysses of his soul are too deep, tormenting him and making him despair. Disillusioned, he retires again from public life and takes refuge in the world of opera melodies. He does not want to admit the financial problems that the state budget has to suffer due to its splendid construction activities. But reality catches up with him, and Ludwig's opponents team up to depose him and the castles in his dream realm of fantasy. Even his longstanding devoted Johann von Lutz, whom he had made minister, must doubt Ludwig's common sense. After a fire breaks out in the castle, Richard Hornig is seriously injured. The sadness of never being allowed to stand by his love for the stable master drives him even further into madness, which his opponents are now increasingly aware of. One of his ministers has a medical report drawn up in order to depose the king.

Ludwig senses the plan and intends to blow himself up with his castles before he can be chased away from them. But this project fails due to the inappropriate explosives. In this way, the minister succeeds in bringing the king into medical care against his will in Castle Berg.

Desperate about the disregard for his royal privileges and his current treatment as a poor lunatic, he decided to escape this treatment. While taking a walk with his doctor, he escapes him and runs into Lake Starnberg, where he drowns.

Historical inaccuracies



* The death of King Maximilian II, Ludwig's father, in the film is shown as if it were extremely sudden. Actually, the sickness which led to his death lasted for many weeks, during which Ludwig was criticized for the audiences he granted to the tenor Albert Niemann, a behaviour considered disrespectful towards his sick father.

* The meeting between Ludwig and Richard Hornig where Hornig himself finds Wagner, which in the film takes place in March 1864, happened instead in May 1867

* In the film the famous official portrait of Ludwig is painted in 1867 while in reality it was already painted in 1865.

* In the film Richard Wagner is found by Hornig while in reality he was found by the king's minister Pfistermeister. Indeed, it was to him that Ludwig gave the photograph with the ruby to give to the composer, and not to Lutz as seen in the film.

* Ludwig decides to curl his hair for the arrival of Wagner, but this decision was actually made when he was still crown prince to hide his protruding ears, a physical defect that he could not bear.

* In the film Ludwig signs the famous Kaiserbrief in the Residenz, while it happened in Hohenschwangau, which is neither shown nor mentioned, although it was a castle very dear to Ludwig.

Cast



* as King Ludwig II (young)

* Sebastian Schipper as King Ludwig II

* Hannah Herzsprung as Empress Elisabeth of Austria

* Edgar Selge as Richard Wagner

* Tom Schilling as Prince Otto

* Justus von Dohnnyi as Johann von Lutz

* Friedrich Mcke as Richard Hornig

* Samuel Finzi as Lorenz Mayr

* Christophe Malavoy as Napoleon III

* Axel Milberg as King Maximilian II

* Katharina Thalbach as Queen Marie

* Uwe Ochsenknecht as Prince Luitpold

* Paula Beer as Duchess Sophie in Bavaria

* August Wittgenstein as Alfred Eckbrecht von Drckheim-Montmartin

References




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