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Occupied City

  • 2023
  • PG-13
  • 4 Std. 26 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
932
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Occupied City (2023)
The past collides with the present in this excavation of the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam: a journey from World War II to recent years of pandemic and protest and a provocative, life-affirming reflection on memory, time and what's to come.
trailer wiedergeben1:35
1 Video
14 Fotos
DocumentaryHistoryWar

Eine Reise vom Zweiten Weltkrieg bis zu den letzten Jahren, die von Pandemien und Protesten geprägt waren, und eine provokante, lebensbejahende Reflexion über die Erinnerung, die Zeit und da... Alles lesenEine Reise vom Zweiten Weltkrieg bis zu den letzten Jahren, die von Pandemien und Protesten geprägt waren, und eine provokante, lebensbejahende Reflexion über die Erinnerung, die Zeit und das, was noch kommen wird.Eine Reise vom Zweiten Weltkrieg bis zu den letzten Jahren, die von Pandemien und Protesten geprägt waren, und eine provokante, lebensbejahende Reflexion über die Erinnerung, die Zeit und das, was noch kommen wird.

  • Regie
    • Steve McQueen
  • Drehbuch
    • Bianca Stigter
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Queen Máxima of the Netherlands
    • Peter R. de Vries
    • King Willem-Alexander
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    932
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Steve McQueen
    • Drehbuch
      • Bianca Stigter
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Queen Máxima of the Netherlands
      • Peter R. de Vries
      • King Willem-Alexander
    • 7Benutzerrezensionen
    • 46Kritische Rezensionen
    • 76Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 6 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:35
    Official Trailer

    Fotos14

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    Topbesetzung5

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    Queen Máxima of the Netherlands
    Queen Máxima of the Netherlands
    • Self
    Peter R. de Vries
    • Self
    • (Archivfilmmaterial)
    King Willem-Alexander
    King Willem-Alexander
    • Self
    Melanie Hyams
    • Narrator
    • (Synchronisation)
    Femke Halsema
    • Self
    • Regie
      • Steve McQueen
    • Drehbuch
      • Bianca Stigter
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen7

    6,6932
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    4book-86631

    Too Long Too Cerebral

    WWII, Nazis, the fate of my people are of and have always been of intense interest to me. Films depicting the war from all angles have intrigued and peaked my attention for decades.

    Having lived in Amsterdam for 13 years, on the so-called Gold Coast where many Jews were banished, I had to see this film. What a disappointment. I waited for the punchline which never came. It was just a long boring mental monologue of names, dates, family, and jobs of individuals in Amsterdam who were murdered. We saw where they lived but nothing else. Feeling and emotion were not part of this film.

    Juxtaposed against 2021 how the lockdown was the first time since WWII in Dutch history where people were confined was a poor comparison to the Holocaust and felt disingenuous and insulting. No one was "murdered" for staying indoors or not wearing a mask. Health crises and pandemics have been scourging humans forever but to compare it with the Holocaust was just fantastical.
    9niko-stolwijk

    worth your time but not for tik tok gen

    This is a great but uncoventional movie/ It last long and you need a concentration span which is not trained in the current tik tok generation. It tells the story of the occupation of Amsterdam during world war II which was the longest occupied city during WW II and also the highest amount of german soldiers per capita which made resitance very difficult in the densly populated Netherlands.

    The horrors of the occupation are told in a cool, emotionless voice while showing the liberty the Amsterdam and dutch people enjoy nowadays. The failure to submit the dutch to the rigourus regime and the passive and active resistence of the dutch are well told and also how much it has cost in human lives. The result is that Amsterdam is a multicultural city and also the jewish population is recovering from the persecution.
    6Bleu-Le-Fluff-0969

    Appreciate the style and intentions but it was more of a patience testing rather then experience

    Firstly, I appreciate filmmaker Steve McQueen's style and intentions on providing an uncomfortable, yet, interesting historical story about WWII and how past and present contexts of the situations. McQueen uses his style to show the city of Amsterdam and the past with gorgeous camerawork, interesting narration and discusses about her environment throughout.

    Throughout, there are some great uses of music and the style approach without using archival footage and focusing on modern settings and scenarios added a lot of interesting themes and discussions about the context to be explored. I found the choices to be interesting.

    It's a 4-hour documentary and I understand the intentions of McQueen's vision. Unfortunately, for a four hour long journey, it's not fully justified because some of the discussions and concepts end up feeling repetitive. The historical discussions are interesting but some of the discussions and ideas felt as if they are being repeated over and over again. For instance, Shoah is a 10-hour documentary but every single moment in Shoah was necessary and important to the context of the setting. Occupied City unfortunately isn't able to fully grasp everything rightfully and ends up being more of a patience testing rather then an experience.

    Overall, the documentary isn't bad as I do appreciate it. But I found myself thinking this documentary could have been trimmed towards 2 hours and a half to become a perfect movie.
    10Quinoa1984

    If you give your time to this, this is one of the most engrossing and challening/rewarding documentaries of this century

    There's been talk in some (but not all) cinephile circles over the past few years (or maybe it has been longer) about how we have so many/too many "Long" films that get released to theaters (and let's table how many make the argument while binging 12 hours of a show in a day). In full disclosure, there have been at least a few in recent memory that have made me wonder "When will this end already" so I can sympathize the need for a break or two.

    But I also subscribe to the notion put forward by, say, Peter Jackson (who has a mixed to positive record on this himself) that a film should be, to paraphrase it a bit, as long as it needs to be. In other words, is the filmmaker and storytellers using that time that they are asking the audience to take with them, once we go into the past 2 1/2 hour range for example, to make that commitment, with care and patience, or is it cinema as masturbation? For me, the context of the subject matter, and the context of the environment one is in, can make a difference (so like Killers of the Flower Moon, 206 minutes, film of the year... Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes at 156, not so much).

    What McQueen is saying I think with the length of Occupied City are two things: 1) it would be short changing the figures of history who died (and/or fought and died and/or saw justice... or not) during 1940 to 1945 when Nazi Germany occupied Amsterdam to make it like an hour and a half, and 2) if you take the accumulation of all these places and events, and how much time I will give you to think and feel about what you're seeing, you may have a different time than you're typical documentary. And, sure enough, this is not unlike the high-marker of all Holocaust documentaries, Shoah, in the sense of "this is now, this is here, this is where it happened, and there is a sense of memory... and perhaps that memory is fading fast."

    At the same time it also isn't like Shoah (maybe no other film could get to that just because of the timing of it all), because this is a Narrated experience, from writing via McQueen's wife Bianca Stitger (also a tremendous documentarian, see Three Minutes a Lengthening, the opposite of this but no less a Put You Through the Ringer of the Medium of Cinema Itself experience), and we are getting history about these people and places that used to live here in Amsterdam.... and many of these who lived also died, many shipped off to concentration camps. And because the city, as we learn in the course of this film, was not bombed as heavily as other European cities, there are places that remain (somewhat) untouched.

    One of the fascinating things about the documentary is because of how it's structured - I was informed after it ended that there were altogether 130 places described and shown (which makes this an average of two minutes per place, some get more than others and some less, of course) - we get so much history about such and such a place; where the Germans did this or that and killed these people and how for example the firing squad worked; how they had their rules and curfews (more on that in a second); and how Jewish family after family after individual was more often than not dehumanized at first by Nazism and it's monstrous system and then shipped off to the camps.

    We also learn about so many of the places where Resistance fighters met and did their acts of resistance both overt and covert (many Jews hidden, some kept away and some betrayed and so on), and where works of art were made into contentious pieces of controversy (ie Rembrandt). But it's not like any one piece of history sticks out necessarily, and that's not only by design it is what makes this such an engrossing and upsetting and yet (in little ways) inspiring experience.

    The visuals of everyday city life, sometimes with protesters (early on due to Covid, other times against fascism and then, near the end, a gigantic March against Climate Change, with some notable figures in the parade I dare not spoil here), sometimes with kids, sometimes with the elderly, sometimes with a random man in a park doing martial arts, and, other vital points, inside many of the places, and McQueen is letting us take in an experience of, well, occupation in modern day... or, during Lockdown, the lack of an occupation, with this 4:3 framed camera bringing us in like I'm not sure would have been the same in a wide-screen frame (oh and the drone shots at night, eat your heart out, Michael Bay, I digress). But all of these visuals with the narration does a number of captivating things because it's never one thing that McQueen is juxtaposing.

    What I mean is that there is so much that he's showing us, and that we are listening to, and sometimes an image and the voice over will be ironic; other times, the moment is precisely reflecting what the narrator wants us to know about this particular place (ie the one Theater, which was closed for a long time and then controversially reopened and now had a long memorial inside with many many names of those Jews who died who were kept there/hidden and then sent away), and other times it's more about, in a curious way, that the people not only don't know what such and such a place was 75/80 years prior, it's maybe better *not* to know.

    I don't mean to suggest ignorance is bliss, rather that McQueen may be suggesting with his approach and style that these people, especially the young, are here now and they have to make the present and the future what it is, and as long as they meet what the moment is there is a chance for humanity. Maybe. Or there's time to dance.

    There's so much to Occupied City, I don't know if I scratched the surface in describing why this is such a special cinematic experience (and it was shot in 35mm and since it was given a Theatrical release, however limited, it's meant to be seen this way in theory). I also get if it may drag on for some or feel too "long." To me, the length is the point, and even when my mind started to drift a little or when, frankly, what McQueen shows us with his camera and the real life subjects is more absorbing than what we are listening to, that's.... good.

    I hate using this term sometimes but it is a Meditation as much as a History of a period in many places that all make up one place, and meditating for this level of time is what we need in a world where everything is in bite sized chunks and information comes so quickly. It's one of those times subject, context, form, and history all converge.

    A tremendous work of art and its hard not to tear up at the end when we see that Torah/Bar Mitvah ceremony.
    1common-name

    A list of addresses. Four hours of a list of addresses, nothing more.

    I can't believe this film even got made. It's like a weird elementary school book report assignment.

    It starts with a woman stating an address, telling you in two sentences what happened there, and then stating another address. For FOUR hours.

    No interviews. No maps of the city so you can even see how these addresses relate to each other. No historic footage. Nothing. Half the time she tells the address, says what happened, then says "demolished." At which point you realize you're not even seeing the address she's talking about.

    If you like memorizing disconnected sound bytes with unrelated montages of Amsterdam in 2020, this film is for you. I can't believe I paid money for this. In fact, I'm going back to Amazon to try to get a refund. It's that bad.

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      Bianca Stigter and Steve McQueen are married.

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Occupied City?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 30. November 2023 (Niederlande)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Niederlande
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official Site
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Occupied City
    • Drehorte
      • Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Niederlande
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • A24
      • Film4
      • Regency Enterprises
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    Box Office

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    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 152.070 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      4 Stunden 26 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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