TIFF ’12: ‘A Late Quartet’ Trailer

I am pretty sure that everyone knows about Philip Seymour Hoffman’s role as Lancaster Dodd in P.T. Anderson’s up-coming The Master. A role that, already has Hoffman receiving critical acclaim and awards, but Hoffman has another role, in another film that is playing at TIFF this year. Hoffman stars alongside Christopher Walken, Catherine Keener and Mark Ivanir in Yaron Zilberman’s fiction feature debut A Late Quartet. 

Official synopsis from the film’s TIFF page:

A scintillating look into a world of art rarely depicted on-screen, the first fiction feature from director Yaron Zilberman assembles a powerhouse cast — Christopher Walken, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener, Mark Ivanir, and young star-in-the-making Imogen Poots — for this dramatically charged tale of an illustrious string quartet that is on the verge of celebrating their twenty-fifth season as an ensemble with an ambitious recital of Beethoven’s Late String Quartets.

While this milestone would seem to be cause for celebration, it soon becomes a flashpoint for the members’ assorted personal traumas and the tangled web of jealousy, envy, ambition, and deeply felt affection that binds the group together. Older than his colleagues, Peter (Walken), the group’s founding member, is diagnosed with a degenerative illness that forces him to confront the troubling question of who will succeed him — and what his legacy will be. The marriage between second violinist Robert (Hoffman) and violist Juliette (Keener) goes suddenly south when infidelity rears its head; while brilliant, headstrong and steel-willed first violinist Daniel (Ivanir), already engaged in a battle over first chair with Robert, brings tensions to a boil when he falls into the arms of Robert and Juliette’s beautiful young daughter Alexandra (Poots), who is a talented violinist in her own right.

As the film progresses gracefully through its own “movements,” we see how Peter’s illness brings these discordant elements painfully to the fore, as long-repressed feelings and explosive emotions shatter the delicate harmony that has bound the group together for so long. As the ensemble’s aging patriarch, Walken has never been better, brilliantly etching Peter’s turbulent indecision and, finally, clear-eyed resolve about the right path to take — even as, unbeknownst to him, the four-cornered universe that he has lovingly created begins to fly apart. Not to be outdone, the rest of the cast rise to Walken’s challenge, and Zilberman (who co-wrote the screenplay with Seth Grossman) never missteps, guiding us gracefully through those painful inevitabilities of aging and change that contrast so movingly with the timeless beauty of music.

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