IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
1712
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Der iranisch-deutschen Parvis arbeitet in einem Flüchtlingsheim, wo er Geschwister iranischer Flüchtlinge trifft und eine zarte Romanze mit Amon entwickelt, während seine Freunde versuchen, ... Alles lesenDer iranisch-deutschen Parvis arbeitet in einem Flüchtlingsheim, wo er Geschwister iranischer Flüchtlinge trifft und eine zarte Romanze mit Amon entwickelt, während seine Freunde versuchen, den Flüchtlingsstatus zu erlangen.Der iranisch-deutschen Parvis arbeitet in einem Flüchtlingsheim, wo er Geschwister iranischer Flüchtlinge trifft und eine zarte Romanze mit Amon entwickelt, während seine Freunde versuchen, den Flüchtlingsstatus zu erlangen.
- Auszeichnungen
- 7 Gewinne & 11 Nominierungen insgesamt
Mashid Shariat
- Parvis' Mutter
- (as Mashid)
Nasser Shariat
- Parvis' Vater
- (as Nasser)
Katarina Gaub
- Ärztin
- (as Katharina Gaub)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The German film Futur Drei was shown in the U.S. with the title No Hard Feelings (2020). (For some reason, IMDb lists the title as Wir. No explanation.) The movie was co-written and directed by Faraz Shariat.
Benny Radjaipour plays Parvis Joon, a young man of Iranian descent, who was born in Germany. For a relatively trivial offense he is sentenced to 120 hours of community service, which he completes at a refugee center.
Banafshe Hourmazdi as Banafshe and Eidin Jalali as Amon are brother and sister refugees, who live in the center and are seeking asylum in Germany. Amon and Parvis are gay, and they fall in love.
The plot of the movie tries to answer the difficult question of whether love is possible in the context of a pending forcible return to a country where gays are under attack.
I thought the movie was excellent and the entire film was clearly the work of a talented director and talented actors.
We saw this movie as part of Rochester's wonderful ImageOut LGBTQ Film Festival. (Shown virtually.) The movie has a borderline IMDb rating of 6.9. I thought it was much better than that, and rated it 9.
Benny Radjaipour plays Parvis Joon, a young man of Iranian descent, who was born in Germany. For a relatively trivial offense he is sentenced to 120 hours of community service, which he completes at a refugee center.
Banafshe Hourmazdi as Banafshe and Eidin Jalali as Amon are brother and sister refugees, who live in the center and are seeking asylum in Germany. Amon and Parvis are gay, and they fall in love.
The plot of the movie tries to answer the difficult question of whether love is possible in the context of a pending forcible return to a country where gays are under attack.
I thought the movie was excellent and the entire film was clearly the work of a talented director and talented actors.
We saw this movie as part of Rochester's wonderful ImageOut LGBTQ Film Festival. (Shown virtually.) The movie has a borderline IMDb rating of 6.9. I thought it was much better than that, and rated it 9.
10maxxiehg
This film is genuinely the most important piece of cinema of our generation. Germany needs this movie more than anything else on screen. I saw this movie three times, because so many of my friends needed to see it. Most of us are immigrants and refugees who have never seen ourselves represented on screen in such a careful and brilliant way. We are touched, moved and inspired by this work.
I would even go so far as to say that this film is more important than Call Me by Your Name.
There are numerous aspects with which many more people can relate to than I had originally expected, which is the true strength of this film. The directors intent was to bring queer immigration stories to the mainstream screen, which is incredibly ambitious and I think he succeeded, even though I did have the feeling that there were several aspects such as relationships with the family that could have been played out a little more. However, this only makes me look forward to his future works.
I would even go so far as to say that this film is more important than Call Me by Your Name.
There are numerous aspects with which many more people can relate to than I had originally expected, which is the true strength of this film. The directors intent was to bring queer immigration stories to the mainstream screen, which is incredibly ambitious and I think he succeeded, even though I did have the feeling that there were several aspects such as relationships with the family that could have been played out a little more. However, this only makes me look forward to his future works.
I found it boring and confusing. The random jump cuts are pretty jarring and honestly nothing happened to really make me care about any of the characters. Lots of strange scenes seemingly thrown in at random.
It's really quite messy and, frankly, boring.
It's really quite messy and, frankly, boring.
I wasn't sure what to expect when I first watched this but thinking back on it in it was a actually a really good film in all that it presented. The acting was good, it had a good story and it came off pretty authentic for the most part. It's a film I would watch again.
Just randomly watch this film cause it win teddy award, i can tell the reason why. It'd been well filmed, with quite slow but special plot, which i know that suite perfectly for the best featured film, if you looking for some entertain or rom-com movies, this is not for you, but it really worth watching, you not gonna boring seeing this. This is not a coming out or another need-to-be sorrow gay movie, it comfort, warm and beauty.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe parents of Parvis (the protagonist of the film) are played by the parents of writer/director Faraz Shariat.
- VerbindungenReferences Gute Zeiten, schlechte Zeiten (1992)
Top-Auswahl
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- How long is No Hard Feelings?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 32 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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