Price To Be Free (2002 film): Difference between revisions

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Price To Be Free (Shinasthana: 自由, sbjih-ljiw) is a 2002 Themiclesian romance film directed by Martin R. Gerry, dramatizing the real story of Kaw Drje, a professional soldier, and Sloi Pjeng, a higher-class woman, during the Pan-Septentrion War and their subsequent married life, when Kaw was constantly away and Sloi had to make ends meet independently. As Sloi had died of cancer in 1970, the story is told through Kaw's reflections while himself undergoing chemotherapy for cancer in 1999, discussing his love life with Kaw Sram, his son with Sloi. The film won critical acclaim for its poignant potrayal of family, female independence, and social class and revolution.  

Synopsis

The film opens with Kaw undergoing chemotherapy for lung cancer in 1999. Uncertain of his future, he starts to reveal his long-repressed love story to his son, Sram, who evidently had a very different relationship with his mother.

In 1942, as a member of the 242nd Regiment, Kaw was on furlough in Tonning, Themiclesia. Despite being on furlough, he was still required to perform office duty from time to time, which led him to spend some nights at the Garett's (an upscale hotel) drinks bar; there, he met Sloi, who was with a group of other female friends. The film then follows Sloi when Kaw was called back to the front, seeing Sloi's parents discussing potential bachelors with him. The film then reveals the Sloi family to be part of the gentry of Tonning, having produced several prominent individuals active in local circles; however, the family's revenues, derived from leases and a modest machine business, has been ravaged by the war effort.

In 1943, the two had a chance encounter with each other when Sloi sent to see her younger cousin off to the army, when Kaw was manning one of the facilities for itemizing recruits. Sloi's cousin was unwilling to join the forces, when Kaw muttered something (not heard on film) accusatory; Sloi then shushed and told him it is not his place to critcize. Kaw then recognized her from the Garett's bar. Briefly separated, they met each other again at the bar; hesitant to acknowledge each other, Kaw apologized first, and the hotel manager arrived to expel Kaw for being in a drab uniform (dark lounge suit required). Sloi instead told the manager that nobody could tell in the dim lighting and said to Kaw that she did not wish to cause him embarrassment in public.

Sloi then asked for Kaw's address, which he was hesitant to give as it might reveal his modest background. However, Kaw decided to give it anyway, as his accent "must have made it obvious already." The film cuts to the modern time with Sran asking if an address could really review that much about a person, and Kaw replies "yes, and more, if you lived where my parents did; that is why I never introduced you to them." It then returns to late 1943 when the two began to meet privately, when the protagonists first confess love for each other; however, the government then placed the 242th Regiment into the South Expedition Army, which was to deploy to Maverica. Kaw was torn between his military career and love life; Sloi encouraged him to stay with the army, saying she preferred to love a man "who made his own living".

Returning to the modern day, Kaw speculates that Sloi wanted to protect his reputation amongst his friends (all were professional soldiers), lest he be reputed as uxorious to the extent that he gave up on both his career and the idea of fighting a just war for his country. However, he also confesses to Sram that he never dared to ask many questions about his wife's beliefs, since she has "done him more honour than anyone else by marrying him." Sram's son, now a young man, then questions whether she simply wanted to see the back of him. Sram silences him with "decency", but Kaw said that she "could have done that much more easily by leaving him, rather than encourage him to continue his military career." Kaw asks if Sram had any information to offer on that matter, but Sram replied that his mother never revealed anything about her love life. Kaw sighs heavily.

The film then advances to 1946, when Kaw finally returns from Menghe. As the soldiers disembarked from the vessel, Sloi turned out to greet him with a large fur hat, which fit over his military hat completely. A real-life photo of Kaw wearing a different hat, in a sea of soldiers is shown. While Kaw is elated to see Sloi again, after more than three years apart, Sloi eventually she reveals her family's knowledge of, and distaste for, her affections. Her parents were dissatisfied because they imagine Kaw would rob her of her dowry and waste it on gambling, when her family was short on cash. They relay tales of "girls of quality" being mistreated by returning soldiers, "would presumably would be worse in the privacy and bond of matrimony." They exhort Sloi to "marry an officer" if she must marry a soldier of some kind, since "many officers originate from decent standing."

In 1947, the 242nd Regiment was returned to Admiralty jurisdiction, since it was originally the 2nd Regiment of Marines. Sloi was secretly encouraged by this news, since it meant her husband would be shuttling between Menghe and Themiclesia, rather than be stationed and exposed there in the longer term; however, she never expressed this, and Kaw only found out when he mistakenly opened one of her letters. Kaw thinks his wife did not wish to become involved in his career, though "out of what reason" he could not tell. Yet this quiescence did not last, since the Admiralty heavily reformed the Marines following the PSW to make them "fit for more than just sitting on ship-railings." Sram confessed that he overheard her mother "still arguing" with her parents in 1961 to be associated with "this of all units" that nearly neglected regicide in 1940 – 41. She, reportedly, said that "what unit Kaw serves in is his decision, and which husband I love is mine."

Following an altercation with a member of the crew of his ship, the SS ′A (鄔艦), Kaw was momentarily too ashamed to see Sloi, knowing that his offence would only encumber her challenge to convince her parents Kaw was an acceptable husband. He slipped away from garrison to her house, he heard a heated argument between her and her parents. Her mother and father declare that they love her very much and could not allow her to marry into a family of "uncertain means and conduct", even discounting all considerations of social standing. They say she would experience "immense loss" in her own social circles that "matrimony cannot compensate, especially this matching." She rebuked them saying "the old ways will not return," because the government owned much of the "factory and could not withstand the risk of returning it to us just like that." Her parents lamented "the curse of the unlimited government."  

Cutting to 1999, Kaw was impressed with his wife's political acumen, for indeed her family was only given a large quantity of shares in the factory that expanded almost ten times during the war, and the Conservative government collapsed in exactly a scandal like that in 1952. Her family relented in 1949, but Kaw's family offered an extremely small pr′ingh payment, which enraged Kaw; to it he added much of his savings to produce €800 (which was sufficient purchase a decent car). Sloi's parents were apparently persuaded by Kaw's fronting a surprising sum of money, which assuaged some fears of an abusive or irresponsible husband. Mrs. Sloi met Kaw personally and told him that she will be loved as much as she is now, and that he must be "willing to weather their impositions in the future, as now," if he is to marry Sloi.

They married in May 1949 in a ceremony attended by almost nobody. The Sloi family would not hire a notary public for fear of associating their name with this partly-scandalous marriage, while Kaw had no money left to hire a reputable one. As a substitute, Kaw invited the regimental solicitor to witness the ceremony on the promise of a "large slice of the cake", which they were able to offer with so many declined invitations. Returning to 1999, Kaw said this was "the only time the Marine Corps ever did anything for me, and only on the promise of a large slice of the cake."

Cast

Production

Reception

See also