IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
2121
IHRE BEWERTUNG
1971, anlässlich der Weltpremiere von Tod in Venedig, erklärte der italienische Regisseur Luchino Visconti seinen Tadzio zum schönsten Jungen der Welt. 50 Jahre später lastet dieser Schatten... Alles lesen1971, anlässlich der Weltpremiere von Tod in Venedig, erklärte der italienische Regisseur Luchino Visconti seinen Tadzio zum schönsten Jungen der Welt. 50 Jahre später lastet dieser Schatten immer noch auf Björn Andresens Leben.1971, anlässlich der Weltpremiere von Tod in Venedig, erklärte der italienische Regisseur Luchino Visconti seinen Tadzio zum schönsten Jungen der Welt. 50 Jahre später lastet dieser Schatten immer noch auf Björn Andresens Leben.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 4 Gewinne & 13 Nominierungen insgesamt
Kristina Lindström
- Narrator
- (Synchronisation)
Luchino Visconti
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Mario Tursi
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
- (as Mario)
Dagny Erixon
- self, Björn Andrésen's grandmother
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Margareta Krantz
- Self - Casting director
- (Synchronisation)
Miriam Sambol
- Self - governess
- (Synchronisation)
Queen Elizabeth II
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Princess Anne
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Ann Lagerström
- self - Björn Andrésen's childhood frien
- (Synchronisation)
Hajime Sawatari
- Self - Photographer
- (Synchronisation)
Barbro Andrésen
- self, Björn Andrésen's mother
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
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Our sympathies follow this spectral Gothic figure as the familiar tale of instant fame followed by disillusionment is played out.
Not an actor (his acting in DIV minimal and awkward) and defined by his looks, I wish he had followed full time his talent for music. Watching him listening to his own playing of Chopin was revealing. But the musical part of his life is left out of this film and therein lies the imbalance.
Obviously a depressive which may have been inherited from his mother, would his life have been much different without DIV? Impossible to live with and self pitying.
I'm not sure why his grandmother comes in for such blame here. Using opportunities as they arise is not blameworthy. She surely would have wanted him to have a happy life, she brought the two children up and his sister seems to be well adjusted,
Not an actor (his acting in DIV minimal and awkward) and defined by his looks, I wish he had followed full time his talent for music. Watching him listening to his own playing of Chopin was revealing. But the musical part of his life is left out of this film and therein lies the imbalance.
Obviously a depressive which may have been inherited from his mother, would his life have been much different without DIV? Impossible to live with and self pitying.
I'm not sure why his grandmother comes in for such blame here. Using opportunities as they arise is not blameworthy. She surely would have wanted him to have a happy life, she brought the two children up and his sister seems to be well adjusted,
This documentary points to a particular case of this boy, who's grandmother tried to get her grandson to make into the film industry. Like many parents were hoping their sons got Tadzio's part, Björn was the one who got it. But unlike many young stars we know, he had problems copping with the attention for being shy and also having family problems didn't particularly helped him. In no way I see him been exploited. He just needed more feedback maybe.
Bjorn Andresson's mother committed suicide when he was very young. He was then cast in Visconti's film 'Death in Venice', as Tadzio, who was, in the eyes of the film's main protagonist, "the most beautiful boy in the world". Subsequently, he does not consider himself to have had a very happy life. We're all made, at least in part, by our experiences; Bjorn, perhaps, was not well-served by his. Because his story is so particular, and peculiar, there's some interest here; but at the same time, things happen to all of us. One doesn't have to blame Bjorn for how his life turned out to see that there aren't stright lines between its beginning and its end; and sadly, there are many people who are unhappy and depressed, even those whose lives have contained little of external note. Sometimes, it's more interesting to watch a documentary than a fiction inspired by the truth; here, I felt that a novelisation of Bjorn's life might bee interesting than a straighforward reporting.
This is a fascinating documentary, particularly for anyone who knows Luchino Visconti's Death in Venice and is therefore already acquainted with the haunting beauty of the young Bjorn Andresen, who played Tadzio. The Most Beautiful Boy in the World is sumptuously photographed and deftly edited to create a legend around Andresen's main claim to fame - and therein lies the problem. It gradually becomes apparent that the producer-directors of this doco are hellbent on the main narrative being that of a beautiful innocent corrupted and all but destroyed by his youthful brush with movie fame. While nobody ever explicitly speaks in terms of a Death in Venice curse, it's very much implied in the shots of an aged and frail Andresen gazing along the same beach where his younger, more carefree self frolicked while making the film; and in the all-to-clear parallels between the lost, lonely old Andresen and Dirk Bogarde's pathetic, crumbling Aschenbach. What's troubling is that the documentary makers are quite clearly determined not to allow too many facts to get in the way of their myth-making. The emphasis is all on instant fame and the pressures of being labelled "The Most Beautiful Boy in the World" leading to Andresen having a deeply troubled life. In fact, this is 90% of the film, with stern fingers pointed at Andresen's fame-obsessed grandmother and some sly, not-entirely-justified jabs at Visconti for their parts in exploiting the boy. There's much less examination of Andresen dealing with a mentally unstable mother, his mother's grisly death when he was still a child, his loss of his own child to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome or his struggles as a husband and father. All of these likely had a bigger impact on Andresen's life than briefly being a poster boy for youthful beauty, and they can't all be conveniently traced directly to his Death in Venice experience. The filmmakers also curiously omit any mention of Andresen actually having a fairly extensive film and TV career after Death in Venice, leaving the false impression that playing Tadzio not only led nowhere, but more or less destroyed him. Frankly, by the end of this weirdly deceitful exercise I formed the impression that Bjorn Andresen has been more egregiously wronged by The Most Beautiful Boy in the World than he ever was by Death in Venice.
Did anyone else feel really uncomfortable with the way the filmmakers handled Bjorn reading the details surrounding his mother's death?
It's clearly a very traumatic experience for him, and quite right too, but the film makers refuse to cut away, keeping the camera rolling as it edges closer and closer to Bjorn's face.
Now maybe Bjorn requested that they don't shy away from capturing that moment, but it just didn't sit well with me. Particularly from a film whose key angle is the exploration of Bjorn's potential exploitation as a child. Can you really cry "exploitation" whilst being exploitative?
It's clearly a very traumatic experience for him, and quite right too, but the film makers refuse to cut away, keeping the camera rolling as it edges closer and closer to Bjorn's face.
Now maybe Bjorn requested that they don't shy away from capturing that moment, but it just didn't sit well with me. Particularly from a film whose key angle is the exploration of Bjorn's potential exploitation as a child. Can you really cry "exploitation" whilst being exploitative?
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFilming took place over five years
- Alternative VersionenThe version shown on TV in Germany and France is only 52 minutes long.
- VerbindungenFeatures Der Tod in Venedig (1971)
- SoundtracksUgly and Vengeful
Written by Anna Von Hausswolff, Filip Leyman & Karl Vento
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Der schönste Junge der Welt - Björn Andrésen - Viscontis blonder Engel
- Drehorte
- Grand Hôtel des Bains, Lido di Venezia, Italien(Setting for "Death in Venice")
- Produktionsfirmen
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 10.443 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 33 Min.(93 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39:1
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