The Sound Of Music (1965) In 1930's Austria, a young woman named Maria is failing miserably in her
attempts to become a nun. When the Navy captain Georg Von Trapp writes to
the convent asking for a governess that can handle his seven mischievous
children, Maria is given the job. The Captain's wife is dead, and he is
often away, and runs the household as strictly as he does the ships he
sails on. The children are unhappy and resentful of the governesses that
their father keeps hiring, and have managed to run each of them off one by
one. When Maria arrives, she is initially met with the same hostility, but
her kindness, understanding, and sense of fun soon draws them to her and
brings some much-needed joy into all their lives -- including the
Captain's. Eventually he and Maria find themselves falling in love, even
though Georg is already engaged to a Baroness and Maria is still a
postulant. The romance makes them both start questioning the decisions they
have made. Their personal conflicts soon become overshadowed, however, by
world events. Austria is about to come under the control of Germany, and
the Captain may soon find himself drafted into the German navy and forced
to fight against his own country. Maria had longed to be a nun since she was a young girl, yet when she
became old enough discovered that it wasn't at all what she thought. Often
in trouble and doing the wrong things, Maria is sent to the house of a
retired naval captain, named Captain Von Trapp, to care for his children.
Von Trapp was widowed several years before and was left to care for seven
'rowdy' children. The children have run off countless governesses. Maria
soon learns that all these children need is a little love to change their
attitudes. Maria teaches the children to sing, and through her, music is
brought back into the hearts and home of the Von Trapp family. Unknowingly,
Maria and Captain Von Trapp are falling helplessly in love, except there
are two problems, the Captain is engaged, and Maria is a postulant! Baron Von Trapp, a widower, runs his home near Salzburg like the ship he
once commanded. That changes when Maria arrives from the convent to be the
new governess of his seven children. Their romps through the hills inspire
all to sing and to find joy in the smallest things -- like raindrops on
window panes. With a renewed zest for life, the baron hosts a party to
introduce his new fiance. Maria knows then she does not want to be a nun.
She marries the baron. The happy ever after part is threatened when
Austria's new German rulers want the baron back in military service. Maria is a failure as a nun. The Mother Superior sends her off in answer to
a letter from a retired naval captain for a governess for his seven
children. She goes to their house and finds that she is the latest in a
long line of governesses run off by the children. She teaches the children
to sing and that becomes their bonding force, of course leading her to fall
in love with their father and marries him. As this is happening Austria
votes to be assumed by Germany on the eve of World war II. Captain Baron von Trapp is a widowed ex-naval officer with seven children
who serve only to remind him of his deceased wife. The Von Trapp home is
thus turned into a gloomy place of order and discipline, until the arrival
of a new governess: Frauline Marie who is from a nearby Salzburg abbey.
Marie shows the Von Trapp children the miracle of the Sound of Music, and
teaches them how to sing. Captain von Trapp's heart opens up to feelings he
had forgotten and he and Marie fall in love. Marie and Georg von Trapp are
married, only to have their world brought down around them by the 1938
Anschluss of Austria, where Nazi Germany takes control of the country and
demands that Captain von Trapp assume a position in the German Navy. |