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Impossible Love 2015

Runtime

125 mins

Language

Portuguese

Portuguese

   Cristina disappears. Tiago, her boyfriend, says that she was kidnapped, two police officers (Marco and Madalena) investigate the case and try to find the truth.

Cristina disappears. Tiago, her boyfriend, says that she was kidnapped, two police officers (Marco and Madalena) investigate the case and try to find the truth.

Does Impossible Love have end credit scenes?

No!

Impossible Love does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Meet the Full Cast and Actors of Impossible Love

Explore the complete cast of Impossible Love, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.


Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Impossible Love

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Read the complete plot summary of Impossible Love, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


In the late 1950s in Châteauroux, France, a modest office worker named Rachel begins a fragile, heartfelt relationship with Philippe Arnold, a brilliant young man born into a wealthy bourgeois family. Their romance yields a daughter, Chantal, and for a time Rachel finds genuine happiness in the small, private joys of motherhood. Yet Philippe refuses to marry outside his class or religion, and when he leaves, he does so with a decisive sense of entitlement that leaves Rachel to raise their child on her own. The emotional burden rests heavily on Rachel, but Chantal remains a bright, continuing source of happiness and purpose for her mother.

When Philippe later announces during a visit that he will marry a younger woman from a wealthy German family and that they are expecting another child, Rachel is crushed. She expels him from the house, yet Philippe continues to seek sexual contact, and Rachel, despite her hurt, navigates the complicated balance of resentment and lingering attachment. The family’s fates intertwine most intensely when they meet again in Strasbourg, where Chantal is fourteen. In that moment, Rachel pushes for Philippe to legally acknowledge his daughter, a step that would grant Chantal the last name and the rights that come with paternal recognition. Philippe’s initial refusal tests Rachel’s resolve, but eventually he relents, and Chantal’s surname becomes Arnold as she and Rachel begin anew in Reims.

On occasional visits, Philippe offers monthly support and wants to be more involved in Chantal’s life, yet his ongoing affair with Rachel casts a shadow over their evolving relationship. The strain deepens when Chantal, at sixteen, enters a relationship with Franck, an older man whom Rachel herself once admired. Franck quietly raises a troubling concern: Philippe has been sodomising Chantal for a long time. Rachel faces a painful choice about confronting her daughter and protecting her, but she ultimately withdraws from a direct confrontation. Chantal’s trust in her father fractures, and their bond grows fragile, with a brief sense of reconciliation giving way to renewed distance.

Years pass. Rachel, now middle-aged, is married to Alain, who begins to suffer from dementia, a quiet parallel to Philippe’s own decline—the latter having Alzheimer’s disease by this stage. Philippe dies, and Chantal, who is now thirty-three, lives in Paris with a daughter of her own. She is emotionally scarred, emotionally volatile, and maintaining a fragile relationship with her mother. The past’s wounds color their interactions, and at times Chantal directs anger toward Rachel, even sending her mother away.

Then, after a period of separation, they finally see each other again in Paris, about five years later. In that long-awaited reconciliation, they open a careful, painful, and necessary discussion about the sexual abuse, humiliation, shame, and controlling behavior Philippe exerted over decades. What emerges is a somber reckoning and a renewed sense of understanding between mother and daughter as they confront a shared history that shaped their lives, one that neither could easily escape but both sought to endure and finally acknowledge.

This is a story told with quiet restraint, focusing on the intimate consequences of a forbidden love, the heavy price of secrecy, and the slow, painful path toward forgiveness and mutual recognition across generations.

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Impossible Love Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Impossible Love across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


Morrer por Amor Невозможная любовь

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