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The Love of Zero

  • 1928
  • 15 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
345
IHRE BEWERTUNG
The Love of Zero (1928)
Kurz

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhile playing his trombone, Zero sees Beatrix and falls in love. They spoon, kiss, and find happiness until she receives a letter from Kabul, demanding that she return to the palace of the g... Alles lesenWhile playing his trombone, Zero sees Beatrix and falls in love. They spoon, kiss, and find happiness until she receives a letter from Kabul, demanding that she return to the palace of the grand vizier. The lovers part, heartbroken.While playing his trombone, Zero sees Beatrix and falls in love. They spoon, kiss, and find happiness until she receives a letter from Kabul, demanding that she return to the palace of the grand vizier. The lovers part, heartbroken.

  • Regie
    • Robert Florey
  • Drehbuch
    • Robert Florey
    • Slavko Vorkapich
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Joseph Marievsky
    • Tamara Shavrova
    • Anielka Elter
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    345
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Robert Florey
    • Drehbuch
      • Robert Florey
      • Slavko Vorkapich
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Joseph Marievsky
      • Tamara Shavrova
      • Anielka Elter
    • 7Benutzerrezensionen
    • 3Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos

    Topbesetzung5

    Ändern
    Joseph Marievsky
    • Zero
    • (as Joseph Mari)
    Tamara Shavrova
    • Beatrix
    Anielka Elter
    • The Woman
    Marco Elter
      Arthur Hurni
        • Regie
          • Robert Florey
        • Drehbuch
          • Robert Florey
          • Slavko Vorkapich
        • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
        • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

        Benutzerrezensionen7

        6,6345
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        planktonrules

        Surrealism meets German Expressionism.

        This is perhaps the first and last film I've seen that tells in the opening credits how much it cost to make! According to these credits, it's impressionistic and cost $200! How interesting.

        The film begins with an oddly costumed man playing a trombone. When he sees a lovely girl, he begins dancing about in a Caligari-inspired set. They then fall in love and time passes--during which time be continues to play his trombone for her. The look of this film is like merging the German Expressionism of "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" with Surrealism--and it makes for a film that the average Joe would NOT enjoy in the least! Although, I am sure, Salvador Dali would have adored the film-as well as people under the influence of LSD! Pretty weird but amazing for only $200! Worth seeing if you are an artsy sort of person of it you are dying for something different--and it IS different!
        7springfieldrental

        Studio Director Shows His Avant-Garde Chops

        An experimental film released during 1927 that had a big impact in the avant-garde community was Robert Florey's 15-minute film, "The Love of Zero." The short was one of Florey's earliest films. The French-born journalist journeyed to Hollywood as a film reporter with Cinemagazine in 1921 and soon was brought on by Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford as their foreign publicity director. Hired as an assistant director for MGM in the mid-1920s, Flory hit his stride in the 1930s and 1940s as one of Hollywood's more prolific directors with over 50 films,. His specialty was mostly low-budget movies for Paramount and Warner Brothers.

        Florey set aside a miniscule $200 to produce "The Love of Zero," which depicted a love affair between a trombone player, Zero, and woman of wealth, Beatrix. Noted set designer William Cameron Menzies built the spartan stage for his colleague.

        In the short film, Zero, a member of the high arts with his lofty ladder, realizes he's lost the love-of-his-life companion, the royal Beatrix, when she is called back to her palace. The sadness of Zero is shown by images of nightmarish ghouls superimposed in front of him. The musicians feels his music, his life, and his love all add up to the sum of nothing.

        To show the emotional complexity of the trombone player, Florey set his camera angles everywhere except straight. Every distortion in the book is seen to symbolize the distraught inner turmoil of the two lovers. The artsy community loved Florey's short. Unfortunately, such pictorial innovation isn't seen in the director's feature films. The film studios' supervision restricted him in his inability to create highly imaginative sequences, an unfortunate development as Hollywood became more conservative in displaying its films visual scenes, unlike in its silent movies.
        7Bunuel1976

        THE LOVE OF ZERO (Robert Florey and William Cameron Menzies, 1927) ***

        The experimental nature of this fairytale-style short (by a couple of notable craftsmen) means that the technique on display swamps what little plot there is – in fact, it was part of a DVD collection of American avant-garde films.

        In any case, we get a dapper-looking artist in love with a girl: she returns his affections, but is promised to someone else; undaunted, he tries to impress another woman but she just laughs in his face…after which he breaks down and is haunted by demons!

        The film is actually intrinsically bizarre: not just in its marvelous CALIGARI-inspired Expressionist look, but the appearance and mannerisms of the lead character (which are no less stylized – particularly the speeded-up dance routine he occasionally engages in). The rest is made up of clever camera tricks which, though having little point in themselves, still manage to delight.
        10zetes

        Pretty amazing

        Robert Florey's Loves of Zero is, as we are told by an opening placard, "an impressionist film made for less than $200.00." And that it is! Great-Grandpappy was right, though. You used to get a heck of a lot for your money back in the good old days. This is mostly just a few friends having a ball on film, playing with the potentialities. It's reminiscent of Bunuel's Un Chien Andalou in that way, except it's not meant to piss us off. The film is goofy, and it knows it, but it is also very beautiful and, ultimately, very poetic. It's certainly a short film that deserves to be more widely known. Just think of how many small masterpieces - or even large ones - from this time period have been lost. Loves of Zero has not been lost, but it might as well be. 10/10.
        7ackstasis

        "You will never return, nor see Zero again"

        Robert Florey broke into the mainstream with films like 'Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932),' but even then remained strongly indebted to the stylisation of German Expressionism, particularly 'The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1920).' His silent short 'The Love of Zero (1927)' references Wiene's classic horror film extensively, even down to the grotesquely- distorted geometric windows, doors and walls. The plot of the film can be reduced to a single sentence – "man meets and loses the love of his life" – yet it's how the film narrates this story that is most fascinating. Just as 'Dr Caligari' used its set design to recreate the twisted annals of a deluded mind, Florey here uses similar architecture (as well a number of creative optical tricks) to reproduce the euphoria of true love, and the wretched heartbreak of romantic tragedy.

        A musician named Zero (Joseph Marievsky), while playing the trombone from his balcony, falls for a beautiful woman (Tamara Shavrova) who is entranced by his music. The pair fall in love: Zero presents Beatrix with the paper cutout of a heart, a literal representation of his love, and she unites it with an identical cutout of her own. This fusion of shapes is a prominent visual motif for Florey, who often uses split- screens to emphasise that, through their love, Zero and Beatrix have become one {in a particularly breathtaking shot, Florey fuses the two faces into one, an image that must have inspired Ingmar Bergman's 'Persona (1966)'}. Later, Zero presents this same cutout to another woman (Anielka Elter), who simply laughs at his earnestness. The humiliated musician discards the heart, now flimsy and two-dimensional in its solitariness, onto the dirt.

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        Details

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        • Erscheinungsdatum
          • 1928 (Vereinigte Staaten)
        • Herkunftsland
          • Vereinigte Staaten
        • Produktionsfirma
          • Florey-Menzies Productions
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        Box Office

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        • Budget
          • 200 $ (geschätzt)
        Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

        Technische Daten

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        • Laufzeit
          • 15 Min.
        • Farbe
          • Black and White
        • Sound-Mix
          • Silent
        • Seitenverhältnis
          • 1.33 : 1

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