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Ich folgte einem Zombie

Originaltitel: I Walked with a Zombie
  • 1943
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 9 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,0/10
14.841
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ich folgte einem Zombie (1943)
Theatrical Trailer from RKO
trailer wiedergeben1:04
1 Video
75 Fotos
Folk-HorrorÜbernatürlicher HorrorZombie-HorrorDramaFantasieHorrorRomanze

Eine Krankenschwester wird angeheuert, um auf einer karibischen Insel die Frau eines Zuckerplantagenbesitzers zu pflegen, die sich seltsam verhält.Eine Krankenschwester wird angeheuert, um auf einer karibischen Insel die Frau eines Zuckerplantagenbesitzers zu pflegen, die sich seltsam verhält.Eine Krankenschwester wird angeheuert, um auf einer karibischen Insel die Frau eines Zuckerplantagenbesitzers zu pflegen, die sich seltsam verhält.

  • Regie
    • Jacques Tourneur
  • Drehbuch
    • Curt Siodmak
    • Ardel Wray
    • Inez Wallace
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Frances Dee
    • Tom Conway
    • James Ellison
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,0/10
    14.841
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jacques Tourneur
    • Drehbuch
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Ardel Wray
      • Inez Wallace
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Frances Dee
      • Tom Conway
      • James Ellison
    • 144Benutzerrezensionen
    • 115Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    I Walked With A Zombie
    Trailer 1:04
    I Walked With A Zombie

    Fotos75

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    Topbesetzung22

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    Frances Dee
    Frances Dee
    • Betsy Connell
    Tom Conway
    Tom Conway
    • Paul Holland
    James Ellison
    James Ellison
    • Wesley Rand
    Edith Barrett
    Edith Barrett
    • Mrs. Rand
    James Bell
    James Bell
    • Dr. Maxwell
    Christine Gordon
    Christine Gordon
    • Jessica Holland
    Theresa Harris
    Theresa Harris
    • Alma
    • (as Teresa Harris)
    Sir Lancelot
    Sir Lancelot
    • Calypso Singer
    Darby Jones
    Darby Jones
    • Carrefour
    Jeni Le Gon
    Jeni Le Gon
    • Dancer
    • (as Jeni LeGon)
    Richard Abrams
    • Clement
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Doris Ake
    • Black Friend of Melise
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Rita Christiani
    • Friend of Melise
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Vivian Dandridge
    • Melisse
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Alan Edmiston
    • Job Interviewer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Kathleen Hartsfield
    • Dancer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Norman Mayes
    • Bayard
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Jieno Moxzer
    Jieno Moxzer
    • Sabreur
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Jacques Tourneur
    • Drehbuch
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Ardel Wray
      • Inez Wallace
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen144

    7,014.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7BrandtSponseller

    Good, but flawed in my view

    The film opens with Betsy Connell (Frances Dee) being interviewed for a home-care nursing position. Oddly, she's asked during the interview if she believes in witchcraft. She gets the position, working for Paul Holland (Tom Conway), who is a wealthy plantation owner on the Caribbean island of St. Sebastian. Holland has hired her to take care of his wife, Jessica (Christine Gordon), who is in a perpetual state that resembles somnambulance. As Betsy spends more time on the island, she learns that most of the population believes in and practices voodoo, and she learns that Jessica had a relatively tumultuous past with Holland's family.

    This was director Jacques Tourneur and producer Val Lewton's second horror/thriller collaboration (the first being Cat People (1942) and the third The Leopard Man (1943)). For many viewers, it is their favorite of the three. While I like the film, I don't like it quite that much--I prefer Cat People. But still, I Walked With A Zombie ends up with a 7 out of 10 from me.

    The horror aspects of I Walked With A Zombie are really very minor. They're really present only as a kind of personification of the results of complicated romantic and familial relationships. Yes, there is an admirable "haunted house"-styled scene involving a spooky stairway and creepy, distant sounds, and yes, the trek to the voodoo "home fort" is well done, but this kind of material doesn't work as well for me here as it did in Cat People, because here it's not really the focus of the story. It's ancillary material with the function of helping to solve a very different kind of mystery. Also, much of the voodoo material (such as the actual ceremony) tends to be overrated in my opinion, although the final sequence related to the voodoo theme is appropriately eerie.

    But what works best for me in I Walked With A Zombie are the many dialogue-heavy scenes where the three main characters--Connell, Holland and Wesley Rand (James Ellison)--gradually learn more about one another, and where the "mystery" is gradually uncovered. A scene where a local "minstrel" sings part of the backstory while Connell and Rand are having a drink is exquisite, for example. Yet, even with this positive aspect, I never felt that the backstory was sufficiently explained. The mystery remains, and the moralizing bookends of the film do not help, either.

    Still, I Walked With A Zombie is definitely worth a watch, and based on the extravagant praise that many viewers utter towards the film, you might like it much better than I do.
    8Coventry

    Not your usual brain-eating corpses...and that's a good thing!

    First of all: PLEASE don't let the misleading, rather silly sounding title discourage you! I walked with a Zombie is another brilliant result of the collaborations between producer Val Lewton and director Jacques Tourneur. Released one year after the simply astonishing movie 'Cat People', this is yet another intelligently elaborated and genuinely original genre-masterpiece. The solid screenplay contains a rarely seen before amount of eeriness and handles about a young ambitious nurse who goes to San Antonio in order to take care of Jessica. Jessica is the wife of plantation-owner Paul Holland and she suffers from a bizarre mental paralysis, supposedly caused by a tropical fever. She is – in fact – a zombie only not the type of walking corpse you usually expect in horror movies. Betsy, the nurse, is somehow convinced that Jessica may still be cured and turns to the Voodoo-community that is living on the island as well. Just like he pulled it off in Cat People, Tourneur manages to bring suspense in a subtle way. Without bloody images but with a unique photography and efficient set pieces! I walked with a Zombie contains great dialogs, intriguing characters and mind bending plot-twists. This is an intelligent and demanding film, especially made for people who take this genre serious! It ranks slightly under 'Cat People' but light-years above most other horror films. Check it out!
    8Hey_Sweden

    Genuinely spooky.

    Betsy Connell (Frances Dee) is a Canadian nurse hired to come to the Caribbean island of St. Sebastian, to work at Fort Holland. There she will attend to the needs of the mute, unresponsive, yet seemingly alive Jessica Holland (Christine Gordon). Jessica is wife to a plantation owner named Paul Holland (Tom Conway), with whom Betsy falls in love. Betsy becomes determined to do the right thing by Paul by trying to cure her, if she can. That includes immersing herself in the local voodoo culture.

    There may be modern horror fans who bemoan the lack of what one might consider horror in "I Walked with a Zombie". It starts to go for more of a traditional creep factor in its second half, using the imposing Darby Jones as the mysterious, zombified Carrefour to great effect. Everything is handled with a great deal of sensitivity and authenticity by screenwriters Curt Siodmak & Ardel Wray, producer Val Lewton, and director Jacques Tourneur. Unlike some of the horror product of the time, it actually treats its black characters with a great deal of dignity and respect, and also gives the actors a chance to shine, such as Theresa Harris as Alma the maid.

    As was always the case with these Lewton productions, the story (based to some degree on Jane Eyre, with factual articles on voodoo in the West Endies also used as a basis) is pretty tight, and the running time is typically short. (69 minutes all told.) We don't get to know the characters all that well, but we do still like them, and in a refreshing touch, there are no clear cut villains or explanations for the strange events. The actors each do a solid job: Dee as the heroine, Conway as the husband, James Ellison as his half brother, Edith Barrett (in old age make-up) as their mother, James Bell as the doctor, and Sir Lancelot as the calypso singer. As one can see, some of the cast were regulars in these Lewton films.

    Overall, there's a real feeling of sadness to the atmosphere, helping to make this one of the best of Lewtons' filmography. One wouldn't know from the end result how quickly and cheaply these productions were made, as they have the power to grip their viewers 70 plus years later.

    Eight out of 10.
    7AlsExGal

    Does a great job of building mood and atmosphere

    Canadian nurse Betsy Connell (Frances Dee) is employed by wealthy Paul Holland (Tom Conway) to take care of his catatonic wife Jessica in the West Indies. It is never said exactly where in the West Indies this is, but it is mentioned that there is a strong presence of voodoo on the island.

    Betsy is told by Jessica's doctor that Jessica has been this way since she had a bad case of a tropical fever, and the catatonia was the aftermath. Jessica can walk and follow simple commands, but she is mute and doesn't seem to comprehend what is going on around her.

    Betsy gets to know both her boss Paul, who is a joyless curmudgeon who proves to be secretly sensitive, as well as his brother Wesley, who is outwardly charming but dangerously embittered. But it's the permanently unavailable Paul whom she grows to love. When a voodoo-believing servant tells Betsy that voodoo has the power to cure Jessica, Betsy takes Jessica to the voodoo encampment to see if they can cause her to reclaim her sanity. Complications ensue.

    The film is for sure atmospheric, like all of the entries from Val Lewton during this time period. That atmosphere includes lumbering women in billowing long white gowns, tall stone staircases, and high gray ceilings. A great sense of unease runs through the veins of this movie from start to finish.

    What did I not like? Character development is very abbreviated. And the locals who inhabit the island seem more like they are sporting the accent of the blacks of the American south than the West Indies. Plus the explanation of events is delivered in just a couple of sentences at the end and left me very unsatisfied - Show me, don't tell me! But then this was meant to be a 70-minute RKO quickie, not a horror classic, so it is remarkable that with such a small budget it has managed to have such staying power over the years. I'd recommend it.
    James L.

    Poetic, entrancing, and one of Lewtons two best.

    The basic plot: A Canadian nurse arrives at the isle of St. Sebastian to take care of a plantation owners mentally entranced and disturbed wife, but once she get's there, she learns more than she should about the family secrets, voodoo , and zombie fever......

    The praise: A truly poetic, hypnotizing, and creepy film experience. The poetry of the island traditions, the family mysteries and everything else about the movie is truly evocative and sensitive. There are smatterings of spooky moments throughout, all frightening suggestively, using sound , imagery and implied chills. All classically and romantically constructed and written, a flagon of longing, taste, and character in every little detail. Well-shot, especially the impressive voodoo ceremony. Very atmospheric, with black& white used to enhance the mood, as in all Lewton movies. Watch for calypso singer Sir Lancelot, who Lewton also used in " Curse of the Cat People", an equally poetic movie, which I also have reviewed. A masterpiece of the horror film, it has many scenes which take together the essential elements of suspense and atmosphere , sound and imagery , such as Dee traveling to the voodoo ceremony. A must-see. Very hard-to-find. The only way I could find it was to order a copy of an unauthorized copy of it from Canada.Truly great.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Val Lewton did not like the article "I Walked With A Zombie" by Inez Wallace that had been optioned, so he adapted the story to fit the novel "Jane Eyre" because he felt the article's plot was too clichéd.
    • Patzer
      On Betsy's first morning, Alma brings her breakfast in bed and fills the coffee cup so full that it spills over. In the very next shot, the cup is much emptier without Betsy having drunk of it.
    • Zitate

      [first lines]

      Betsy Connell: [voice over, giggling after the first line] I walked with a zombie. It does seem an odd thing to say. Had anyone said that to me a year ago, I'm not at all sure I would have known what a zombie was. Oh, I might have had some notion that they were strange and frightening... even a little funny. It all began in such an ordinary way...

    • Crazy Credits
      At the beginning, in small letters at the bottom of the screen is this disclaimer: The characters and events depicted in this photoplay are fictional. Any similarity to any persons, living, dead, OR POSSESSED, is entirely coincidental.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: I Walked with a Zombie (1969)
    • Soundtracks
      O Marie Congo
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Performed by ensemble

      [Sung by the crew of the clipper ship]

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 30. April 1943 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Yo dormí con un fantasma
    • Drehorte
      • Sequit Point, Leo Carrillo State Beach - 35000 W. Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, Kalifornien, USA(rocky beach scenes)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • RKO Radio Pictures
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 9 Min.(69 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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