Rowing with the Wind explained

Rowing with the Wind
Director:Gonzalo Suárez
Producer:Andrés Vicente Gómez
Starring:Hugh Grant
Lizzy McInnerny
Valentine Pelka
Elizabeth Hurley
Music:Alejandro Massó
Cinematography:Carlos Suárez
Editing:José Salcedo
Studio:Ditirambo Films
Released: (San Sebastián International Film Festival)
Runtime:2 hr 6 min (126 min) (home video)
1 hr 36 min (96 min) (Original Spanish release)
1 hr 45 min (105 min) (USA release)
Country:Spain
Language:English

Rowing with the Wind a.k.a. Remando al viento (Spanish title) is a 1988 Spanish film written and directed by Gonzalo Suárez. The film won seven Goya Awards.[1] It concerns the English writer Mary Shelley and her circle.

Plot

In the summer of 1816, English poet Percy Shelley, his soon to be wife Mary Shelley (daughter of William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft), and Mary's stepsister and companion Claire Clairmont take a holiday with Lord Byron and his physician John William Polidori at a villa rented by Byron at Lake Leman, Switzerland.

Byron challenges each of the friends to write a horror story, and Mary begins her novel, Frankenstein. She imagines the monster becoming real, and for the next six years, as tragedy befalls those around her, she believes the creature of her imagination is the cause.

Meanwhile, Claire has Byron's baby, is estranged from him and barred from seeing her daughter. Byron and Percy continue their friendship, the one hedonistic, the other idealistic. The Shelleys move near Pisa.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Estos son los premios de los Premios Goya 1989 . www.premiosgoya.com . 2 February 2024 . These are the prizes of the 1989 Goya Awards.