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Es lebe die Freiheit

Originaltitel: À nous la liberté
  • 1931
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 23 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
5191
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Es lebe die Freiheit (1931)
Klassisches MusicalSatireSlapstickKomödieMusikalisch

Auf der Suche nach einem besseren Leben fliehen zwei Sträflinge aus dem Gefängnis.Auf der Suche nach einem besseren Leben fliehen zwei Sträflinge aus dem Gefängnis.Auf der Suche nach einem besseren Leben fliehen zwei Sträflinge aus dem Gefängnis.

  • Regie
    • René Clair
  • Drehbuch
    • René Clair
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Raymond Cordy
    • Henri Marchand
    • Rolla France
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,4/10
    5191
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • René Clair
    • Drehbuch
      • René Clair
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Raymond Cordy
      • Henri Marchand
      • Rolla France
    • 47Benutzerrezensionen
    • 53Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 3 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos22

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    + 15
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    Topbesetzung18

    Ändern
    Raymond Cordy
    Raymond Cordy
    • Louis
    Henri Marchand
    Henri Marchand
    • Émile
    Rolla France
    • Jeanne
    Paul Ollivier
    Paul Ollivier
    • L'oncle
    • (as Paul Olivier)
    Jacques Shelly
    • Paul
    André Michaud
    • Le contremaitre
    Germaine Aussey
    Germaine Aussey
    • Maud - la femme de Louis
    Léon Lorin
    • Le vieux monsieur sourd
    William Burke
    • L'ancien détenu
    Vincent Hyspa
    • Le vieil orateur
    Albert Broquin
    • Le marchand de primeurs
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Robert Charlet
      Léon Courtois
        Alexander D'Arcy
        Alexander D'Arcy
        • Le gigolo
        • (Nicht genannt)
        Marguerite de Morlaye
        • Une invitée au diner
        • (Nicht genannt)
        Ritou Lancyle
          Maximilienne
          • Une invitée au diner
          • (Nicht genannt)
          Eugène Stuber
          • Un gangster
          • (Nicht genannt)
          • Regie
            • René Clair
          • Drehbuch
            • René Clair
          • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
          • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

          Benutzerrezensionen47

          7,45.1K
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          Empfohlene Bewertungen

          ouija-3

          Marvellous early sound film

          Clair's À nous la liberté is a wonderful satire of modern mass production, magnificently shot, directed, decently acted and with impressive sets. The satirical content is stressed but not too on-your-face. The main reaction to the film is delight.

          Some of the sequences were an obvious inspiration to Chaplin, whose masterpiece Modern Times resembles this film quite a lot both in the way it looks as well as thematically.

          The picture and sound quality, at least in the version shown on Finnish TV, are superb which is surprising considering the age of the film.

          The music is good and well used, except the songs which are slightly irritating. Still, this is a great and pleasing film with a very amusing scene in the end, taking place at the opening of a new factory.
          9hitchcockthelegend

          Freedom for ever.

          Emile and Louis are two jailed friends who dream of freedom and plan to escape. Louis is successful and becomes a phonograph factory tycoon, after Emile finally breaks out he seeks work at Louis' factory. Tho initially the harshness of industrialisation keeps them poles apart, they both come to realise that friendship and being honest to oneself is far more rewarding than love or any sort of financial gain.

          À nous la liberté {orginaly titled Liberté chérie} is a truly biting musical satire written and directed by the considerably talented René Clair. Filmed without a script, with Clair giving his actors free licence to improvise, the picture focuses on the dehumanisation of workers at an industrial plant. Shifting as it does from prison to this monstrosity place of work, the viewer is forced to wonder just exactly which is the prison of the picture? For workers trundle in to work, punching in to a clock and sitting at a conveyor belt for hours on end, they are merely robots for this corporate machine, life is indeed desperately dull.

          Clair pulls no punches in portraying everyone who doesn't work on the shop floor as greedy capitalist schemers, one sequence literally see the elite grasping for Francs strewn by the mounting storm. This wind of change also releases Emile and Louis from their respective constraints, and it's thru this change that we the viewer are rewarded with a truly uplifting ending that closes the film magnificently. The picture was a flop on its initial release, managing to offend parties from various corners of the globe, but now in this day and age the film has come to be hailed as something of a French masterpiece, coming some five years before Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times {Clair's camp even wanted to sue Chaplin for plagiarism, but Clair actually took it as a compliment}, this clearly is the template movie for industrial indictment. At times devilishly funny, at others poignantly sad, À nous la liberté is a cinematic gem that all serious film lovers should digest at least once. 9/10
          8propos-86965

          Cinema a la France and Hollywood

          Much has been written regarding the most likely influence of A Nous la Liberte on Chaplin's Modern Times. Though you could argue that Clair was also influenced by Buster Keaton and the Keystone Cops films. I, also, see the two prison buddies to be reminiscent of Laurel and Hardy in their physical contrast and on and off affection. Even with borrowing or outright plagiarism, this is a little gem of a movie worthy of its historic stature. By the way, I'd say Jacque Tati must have seen Clair's film and paid homage in his film Traffic. N'est-ce pas?
          8puzzow

          Delightful!

          I profess-- I never heard of this movie nor this director till I watched it tonight. As pointed out, the film has a socialist message-- mainly a scaffolding to hang some very clever physical humor on, though it manages to fit in a few astute (likewise hysterical) observations about modern industrial society. The male leads are absolutely charming and have great chemistry. The style of the film is something in itself. The soundtrack (one of the first original ones to be used in a film) is intertwined with the action on screen, and occasionally the actors sing along with it almost as if this were a musical...but not quite. There are moments of pantomime infused with talking scenes, almost as if the director was trying figure out how to work his style for making silent films into talkies. In total, it's a bit odd-- but it works! And it's unique. And far from dated-- it gave me quite a few belly-laughs.
          8treywillwest

          nope

          It was striking watching this film shortly after having attended a very fine museum exhibit on American Precisionist painting, a style in vogue at the time this film was made. As in Precisionism, the imagery here is concerned with the industrialization of society. Every facet of social life, not just the work-place, but the school and the prison-system seems to director Rene Clair to have been turned into a factory. The film features some extremely clever editing making the connection between industrial production and the production of passive subjects of capitalism clear. The difference between Clair and the Precisionists is that most of the latter saw in industrialization a utopian promise. What few who didn't, such as George Ault , understood industrialization in apocalyptic terms. In either case, it represented for the Precisionists an absolute transformation of life from which there was no turning back. For the filmmaker's part, Clair clearly understood modernity in sinister terms, industrialization bringing about the mechanization of the subject, but his humanism made it impossible for him to see the modernist challenge to humanity as insurmountable. For Clair, human dignity could be salvaged just by forsaking the materialist temptations of capitalism for the simple pleasures of life. Exploiter and exploited could return to a loving, communal relationship by embracing poverty and freedom. Art historians have proposed that the utopianism of Precisionist art was abolished by the horrific realizations of WWII. That would, it seems to me, to apply equally to the humanist utopia of Clair's cinema.

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          Verwandte Interessen

          Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer in West Side Story (1961)
          Klassisches Musical
          Peter Sellers in Dr. Seltsam oder: Wie ich lernte, die Bombe zu lieben (1964)
          Satire
          Leslie Nielsen in Die nackte Kanone (1988)
          Slapstick
          Will Ferrell in Anchorman - Die Legende von Ron Burgundy (2004)
          Komödie
          Julie Andrews in Meine Lieder, meine Träume (1965)
          Musikalisch

          Handlung

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          • Wissenswertes
            When Charles Chaplin's Moderne Zeiten (1936) premiered, the original distribution company of À nous la liberté, Tobis, wanted to sue. Director René Clair refused to join such a suit, saying that he considered it a compliment if Charles Chaplin based his film on René Clair's, but the suit went ahead nevertheless. Tobis, sued United Artists and Charles Chaplin for plagiarism. The suit, with separate segments in France and in the US, went on for more than a decade, right through WWII. Charles Chaplin, at the request of his lawyers, finally settled, but never admitted to the charge. René Clair stayed aloof from the affair, and he and Charles Chaplin, whom he greatly admired, remained friends.
          • Zitate

            Louis: [singing] You can laugh and sing, Drink and love, Freedom forever!

          • Alternative Versionen
            In 1950 director Rene Clair re-edited and shortened the film based on existing prints (the Nazis had destroyed the negative). Some excisions include the singing flowers and the scene at the Luna Park, the sequence depicting Émile's date with Jeanne.
          • Verbindungen
            Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A francia lírai realizmus (1989)
          • Soundtracks
            À nous la Liberté !
            Music by Georges Auric

            Lyrics by René Clair

            Performed by Henri Marchand and Raymond Cordy

          Top-Auswahl

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          FAQ15

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          Details

          Ändern
          • Erscheinungsdatum
            • 31. Oktober 1958 (Westdeutschland)
          • Herkunftsland
            • Frankreich
          • Sprache
            • Französisch
          • Auch bekannt als
            • Freedom for Us
          • Produktionsfirma
            • Films Sonores Tobis
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          Technische Daten

          Ändern
          • Laufzeit
            • 1 Std. 23 Min.(83 min)
          • Farbe
            • Black and White
          • Sound-Mix
            • Mono
          • Seitenverhältnis
            • 1.20 : 1

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