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IMDbPro

Der Besessene von Tahiti

Originaltitel: The Moon and Sixpence
  • 1942
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 29 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
919
IHRE BEWERTUNG
George Sanders and Elena Verdugo in Der Besessene von Tahiti (1942)
DramaRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuLoosely inspired by Gauguin's life, the story of Charles Strickland, a middle-aged stockbrocker who abandons his middle-class life, his family, and his duties to start painting, as he has al... Alles lesenLoosely inspired by Gauguin's life, the story of Charles Strickland, a middle-aged stockbrocker who abandons his middle-class life, his family, and his duties to start painting, as he has always wanted to do. He is from then on a awful human being, wholly devoted to his ideal: be... Alles lesenLoosely inspired by Gauguin's life, the story of Charles Strickland, a middle-aged stockbrocker who abandons his middle-class life, his family, and his duties to start painting, as he has always wanted to do. He is from then on a awful human being, wholly devoted to his ideal: beauty.

  • Regie
    • Albert Lewin
  • Drehbuch
    • W. Somerset Maugham
    • Albert Lewin
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • George Sanders
    • Herbert Marshall
    • Doris Dudley
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    919
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Albert Lewin
    • Drehbuch
      • W. Somerset Maugham
      • Albert Lewin
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • George Sanders
      • Herbert Marshall
      • Doris Dudley
    • 25Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 4 Gewinne & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos17

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    Topbesetzung21

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    George Sanders
    George Sanders
    • Charles Strickland
    Herbert Marshall
    Herbert Marshall
    • Geoffrey Wolfe
    Doris Dudley
    Doris Dudley
    • Blanche Stroeve
    Eric Blore
    Eric Blore
    • Capt. Sandy Nichols
    Albert Bassermann
    Albert Bassermann
    • Dr. Coutras
    Florence Bates
    Florence Bates
    • Tiare Johnson
    Steven Geray
    Steven Geray
    • Dirk Stroeve
    • (as Steve Geray)
    Elena Verdugo
    Elena Verdugo
    • Ata
    Fernando Alvarado
    • Native Boy at Wedding
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gino Corrado
    Gino Corrado
    • Man Seated in Paris Dive
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Willie Fung
    Willie Fung
    • Tiare's Cook
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gibson Gowland
    Gibson Gowland
    • Party Guest
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Robert Greig
    Robert Greig
    • Maitland - Wolfe's Valet
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Rondo Hatton
    Rondo Hatton
    • The Leper
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Kenneth Hunter
    • Col. Fred MacAndrew
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Molly Lamont
    Molly Lamont
    • Amy Strickland
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mike Mazurki
    Mike Mazurki
    • Tough Bill
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gerta Rozan
    • French Floozie
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Albert Lewin
    • Drehbuch
      • W. Somerset Maugham
      • Albert Lewin
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen25

    6,6919
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    6blanche-2

    Based on Somerset Maugham's novel

    George Sanders stars in "The Moon and Sixpence," a 1942 film also starring Herbert Marshall, Doris Dudley, Eric Blore, Steven Geray, and Albert Basserman. Loosely based on the life of Gauguin, the screenplay by Albert Lewin is based on the book by Somerset Maugham.

    As in the later "The Razor's Edge," Maugham, here also played by Herbert Marshall, serves as narrator for most of the film. Sanders is the unpleasant, self-involved Charles Strickland, a stock broker who deserts his family and leaves London to go to Paris and become a painter. There he meets Dirk Stroeve (Geray), who becomes a friend. When Strickland becomes ill, Stroeve over the strong objections of his wife Blanche (Dudley) moves Strickland to their home to nurse him back to health. Stroeve then gets the impression that his wife is in love with Srrickland, and that Strickland has no intention of leaving. So he throws him out. His wife says that she's leaving with him. Stroeve leaves instead.

    Strickland eventually tires of Blanche and then leaves for Tahiti. There he continues to paint and even falls in love with a native girl, Ata (Elena Verdugo). There Dr. Coutras (Bassermann) picks up the narration.

    As the unapologetic user obsessed with his work, George Sanders is excellent. Like many in the studio system, he was typecast into playing one type of role, but he was capable of so much more. Another revelation in this film is Eric Blore, who was always typecast as a butler. Here he is a different kind of character and is absolutely wonderful. Herbert Marshall does not register much in what is basically a thankless role - he had more to do in The Razor's Edge.

    Good movie. If this and Lust for Life are any indication, Gauguin, even if this character just hints at him, was a most unpleasant character.
    8byoolives

    terrific story

    The story alone is worth viewing. The very idea of a person abandoning their family in order to follow one's dream, is compelling enough. George Sander's performance as well as Herbert Marshall as Somerset Maughm are both fist rate. No one could have done a finer job at playing the tortured cad then Sanders. If they had another one of those silly top 100 lists, this one for best type casting in a film about cads, then Sanders would win in a trot. He was in real life it appears, the very cad that he played so convincingly on screen. A book was even written about him by an actor friend, Brian Ahearne. The title of the book is "A Dreadful Man". The actor Ronald Coleman would not even allow Sanders in his presence, as he found his disdain and pessimism to much to bear. At the age of 65 Sanders committed suicide in a Paris hotel room just as he had promised actor David Niven years earlier, claiming that by that time he would no longer have interest in women or anything else. (Consult Niven's book "Bring On The Empty Horses") I can understand one user's previous comment about this being Sanders only great role. But Mr. Sanders won an Oscar for playing another cad, the rascal theater critic in "All About Eve". One of my favorite lines in that movie is when he replies to a very beautiful young starlet(Marilyn Monroe) who he has accompanied to a dinner party saying "You have a point. An idiotic one, but a point none the less".
    6st-shot

    Dropping out

    George Sanders goes Gaughin in this film based on the Somerset Maugham novel about a well respected man who decides to drop out of society and paint to his hearts delight. Leaving a wife and children behind in England he first moves to Paris where he is befriended by a kindly successful hack painter who in return is re payed with ridicule and cuckoldry. George Strickland's dream is to get to Tahiti though and be done with Western society. He eventually does but at great final cost.

    Sanders is perfectly cast as the insensitive and coldly indifferent Strickland who really just wants to be left alone. He asks for nothing but exploits kindness to its fullest when forced upon him, especially by the artist Stroeve. In a leading man of the era's hand the role would more than likely have been diluted and suffered but with Sanders you get a bored condescension and disdainful inflection like no other.

    Unfortunately the rest of Sixpence lags a good distance behind Sander's spot on performance. Director Albert Lewin employs very little scope and camera movement with little attention payed to set design and lighting. The sepia tint of the film washes out in some scenes and was more than likely employed by Lewin to display Strickland's magnum opus at the end but even this disappoints.

    Herbert Marshall is dry and drab as the narrator and the rest of the cast flat and stiff. Combined they lack the life and conviction to be found in Sander's performance which might have even soared further had Lewin applied the expressionistic flourishes to be found in his The Picture of Dorian Gray a far more successful picture with a less secure actor.
    6CinemaSerf

    The Moon and Sixpence

    George Sanders is good, in what's quite an untypical type of role for him, in this otherwise rather plodding and wordy drama that has shades of the life of Paul Gauguin to it. He's a stockbroker ("Strickland") who tires of his life and his wife so decides to take up a career painting and living in Paris. The only constant in his life is his long suffering friend "Wolfe" (narrator Herbert Marshall) but even he loses interest as his friend becomes more odiously manipulative, introspective - and broke - as time goes by. Oddly enough, however desperate he becomes, he refuses to sell his works - and that poverty and a constant search for inspiration ultimately sees him in the South Seas where he finds some semblance of peace before his mortality catches up with him! At times the two-header boozy lunches between Sanders and Marshall give the script some pith, but that this selfish creature could make and break marriages quite so readily does test belief and I felt increasingly disinterested in the characters or the story on display here. The production is really quite basic and like so many of W. Somerset Maugham's stories - there is a distinct lack of joy and a surfeit of obsessiveness with the proceedings. Maybe I just wasn't in the mood - but I was a bit bored with this.
    7bkoganbing

    His misanthropic best

    Herbert Marshall plays W. Somerset Maugham in fact if not name in The Moon And Sixpence as he narrates the story of how his life intersected with that of George Sanders a man who left middle class respectability to do his thing with painting, first in Paris and then the South Seas. Marshall is his erudite best and Sanders once again is a cad.

    When Marshall first knows Sanders he's the soul of Victorian rectitude, no one suspecting what is beneath the surface. So when one fine day he up and leaves his wife Molly Lamont to go live the Bohemian life as a painter in Paris it shocks everybody. In fact Lamont prevails on Marshall to go to Paris to see what brought this about.

    Somerget Maugham's view on human relations and the creative soul are once again given an airing in The Moon And Sixpence. Maugham was a gay man, but there are certain gay men who truly do not like women on most levels. They make too many demands on the creative man, fascinated though they might be by him. That view is in full force when dealing with Lamont and with Doris Dudley who plays a married woman who leaves her husband Steven Geray to take up with Sanders in Paris. His ideal woman is Tahitian Elena Verdugo, pretty and sexy without too much education who takes care of man's physical needs with no demands.

    Women were not Maugham's favorites. You can see that in work like Of Human Bondage with Mildred Rogers or in Rain with Sadie Thompson. And I can't forget The Razor's Edge and the part that Gene Tierney plays.

    Sanders is a caddish as he ever has gotten on the big screen for the first two thirds of the film. But in Tahiti with no demands on him he becomes a mensch. For myself staying a mensch when life does make demands on you is the true test. But what do I know?

    The Moon And Sixpence is Maugham at his misanthropic best. Sanders and Marshall top a fine cast in a film that could have been a real classic with a bigger budget from an A list studio. Herbert Marshall would be the narrator author W. Somerset Maugham again in The Razor's Edge which is a better film. This one in fact did get an Oscar nomination for Dimitri Tiomkin's musical scoring. The Moon And Sixpence can definitely hold its own.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Herbert Marshall plays the writer Geoffrey Wolfe, a fictional alter ego of author W. Somerset Maugham. Marshall played Somerset Maugham in Auf Messers Schneide (1946), and appeared in several adaptations of Maugham's works, including Der bunte Schleier (1934) and both the 1929 and 1940 versions of Das Geheimnis von Malampur (1940).
    • Patzer
      Strickland mispronounces Papeete (the capital of Tahiti) as "Pah-peet-ee". The correct pronunciation, as any resident of Tahiti would know, is "Pah-pay-ay-tay".
    • Zitate

      Geoffrey Wolfe: Why will you never let me meet your husband?

      Amy Strickland: He's not at all literary - he'd probably bore you to death.

      Geoffrey Wolfe: Does he bore you?

      Amy Strickland: I happen to be his wife: I'm very fond of him. He doesn't pretend to be a genius. In fact, he doesn't even make very much money on the stock exchange. But he's awfully good and kind.

      Geoffrey Wolfe: I think I should like him very much.

    • Alternative Versionen
      There is a tinted and a color sequence toward the end of the film, both of which have recently been restored, but for many years this film was seen only in black-and-white.
    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Fräulein Privatsekretärin (1948)
    • Soundtracks
      We, Three Kings of Orient Are
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1955 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Moon and Sixpence
    • Produktionsfirma
      • David L. Loew-Albert Lewin
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 401.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 29 Min.(89 min)
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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