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Münchhausen

  • 1943
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,0/10
2300
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Münchhausen (1943)
AbenteuerFantasieKomödie

Dieses aufwendig inszeniertes, freches Märchen für Erwachsene entführt den Zuschauer ins 18. Jahrhundert und dort von Braunschweig nach Sankt Petersburg, Konstantinopel, Venedig und schließl... Alles lesenDieses aufwendig inszeniertes, freches Märchen für Erwachsene entführt den Zuschauer ins 18. Jahrhundert und dort von Braunschweig nach Sankt Petersburg, Konstantinopel, Venedig und schließlich auf den Mond, dessen atemberaubende Aufnahmen durch ausgetüftelte Spezialeffekte erst ... Alles lesenDieses aufwendig inszeniertes, freches Märchen für Erwachsene entführt den Zuschauer ins 18. Jahrhundert und dort von Braunschweig nach Sankt Petersburg, Konstantinopel, Venedig und schließlich auf den Mond, dessen atemberaubende Aufnahmen durch ausgetüftelte Spezialeffekte erst so richtig zu Geltung kommen.

  • Regie
    • Josef von Báky
  • Drehbuch
    • Gottfried August Bürger
    • Erich Kästner
    • Rudolph Erich Raspe
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Hans Albers
    • Wilhelm Bendow
    • Michael Bohnen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,0/10
    2300
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Josef von Báky
    • Drehbuch
      • Gottfried August Bürger
      • Erich Kästner
      • Rudolph Erich Raspe
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Hans Albers
      • Wilhelm Bendow
      • Michael Bohnen
    • 30Benutzerrezensionen
    • 26Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos34

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    Topbesetzung64

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    Hans Albers
    Hans Albers
    • Baron Münchhausen
    Wilhelm Bendow
    Wilhelm Bendow
    • Der Mondmann
    Michael Bohnen
    Michael Bohnen
    • Herzog Karl von Braunschweig
    Hans Brausewetter
    Hans Brausewetter
    • Freiherr von Hartenfeld
    Marina von Ditmar
    Marina von Ditmar
    • Sophie von Riedesel
    Andrews Engelmann
    Andrews Engelmann
    • Fürst Potemkin
    Käthe Haack
    Käthe Haack
    • Baronin Münchhausen
    Brigitte Horney
    Brigitte Horney
    • Zarin Katharina II
    Waldemar Leitgeb
    • Fürst Grigorij Orlow
    Walter Lieck
    • Der Läufer
    Ferdinand Marian
    Ferdinand Marian
    • Graf Cagliostro
    Hubert von Meyerinck
    Hubert von Meyerinck
    • Prinz Anton Ulrich
    Jaspar von Oertzen
    • Graf Lanskoi
    Werner Scharf
    • Prinz Francesco d'Este
    Armin Schweizer
    • Johann
    Marianne Simson
    Marianne Simson
    • Die Mondfrau
    Leo Slezak
    Leo Slezak
    • Sultan Abdul-Hamid
    Hermann Speelmans
    Hermann Speelmans
    • Christian Kuchenreutter
    • Regie
      • Josef von Báky
    • Drehbuch
      • Gottfried August Bürger
      • Erich Kästner
      • Rudolph Erich Raspe
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen30

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    kg2006

    Impressive non Hollywood "Hollywood" movie

    In film history class we were usually shown a silent era German movie followed by Triumph of the Will. This film ought to be included. It is surprising on a few fronts. One is the high production values. Not a cheap movie at all. Even when compared to a US technicolor film of the period, this had a few advantages like real European locations, access to the Venice canals (a movie in colour first?). It could also be the first colour film to show a space-science fiction sequence. The effects were impressive for the time and its clear that the Gilliam version borrowed some fx ideas from this. The often heard assumption that Germany's best film technicians all fled or were killed simply isn't true judging by this. Very colourful film. The language barrier prevented me from judging the comic timing very well but looked as though the performances were on target. As others have pointed out the nudity and sexual talk is rather jarring to see when you think of the US censorship board of the period. Probably the two biggest surprises were the black people(!) and the not so unsubtle digs at the regime. The villain with the moustache talking about invading Poland really came as a surprise. This flies in the face of what I often heard-that Germans were brainwashed by Hitler-clearly there was some dissent judging from this. And it also counters the idea that was put froward in the last 10 years that in war time one doesn't criticize the sitting president. They did in Nazi Germany!
    7Bunuel1976

    MUNCHHAUSEN {The 2004 Restored Edition} (Josef von Baky, 1943) ***

    I first watched this in the early 1990s on Italian TV; back then, I didn't even know it existed and, in all probability, the version I watched was trimmed - since the full-blown restoration wasn't carried out until 2004! Anyway, I remember the film with affection and I thoroughly enjoyed rewatching it on DVD (even if this version is still several minutes shy of its 134-minute original length!).

    For being made right in the middle of WWII, this is an obscenely expensive - circa $35 million in today's currency - spectacle (given pretty much carte blanche, the producers went overschedule and overbudget) commissioned by the Nazis - but scripted, ironically, by a Jew - on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of Germany's foremost film unit, UFA, it was also seen as a direct response to such foreign-made extravaganzas as Hollywood's THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) and Britain's THE THIEF OF BAGDAD (1940)! The character of the tale-spinning Baron Munchausen originated in a book by 18th century author Gottfried August Burger which, along the years, has inspired 4 feature-film adaptations (as well as a Silent short by pioneering wizard Georges Melies and an animated short that was thankfully included on the Kino DVD and which will be discussed separately). Despite the stature accorded the 1988 Terry Gilliam version THE ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN (which I watched only once several years ago and recall being a somewhat hit-or-miss affair), the 1943 film emerges as perhaps the most satisfying cinematic rendition overall.

    The film is book-ended by scenes with a contemporary i.e. 1940s setting, in which the Baron (played as a dashing yet cunning womanizer rather than the Quixotic fool envisioned by Terry Gilliam) recounts some of his adventures - in the third person - to a naïve young couple (the female member of which had fallen under his spell at a fancy-dress ball). The rest is an episodic fantasia in which Munchausen - usually driven by the promise of a romance and accompanied by his faithful sidekick - journeys from one country to the other (meeting along the way historical historical figures like Czarina Catherine The Great, Giacomo Casanova and the magician Cagliostro, who endows him with both immortality and the power of invisibility, as well as purely invented characters such as the self-proclaimed "world's fastest runner") until he ends up on the moon itself. Quality varies but the end result, as a whole, is a delight and a veritable feast for the eyes (thanks, in no small measure to the highly pleasing Agfacolor, the splendid production design and the charmingly primitive special effects).

    Still, one thing that bothered me about the DVD was the fact that the subtitles barely allowed one time to read them (in all fairness, this had a lot to do with the virtually uninterrupted flurry of the film's dialogue itself - hence, something other than a thin white font should have been adopted)! The extras were more extensive than I had anticipated and up to Kino's standards for a "Special Edition" release - the best, however, was the 17-minute interview with the head of the German archival company that handled the current restoration, which goes into some detail about this as well as the production of the film itself.

    DIE ABENTEUER DES BARON MUNCHHAUSEN - EINE WINTERREISE (Hans Held, 1944) **1/2 {6/10}: A pleasant animated short from Germany about the popular title character, made in color but containing no dialogue; it came hot on the heels of the 1943 epic film version - though the latter, apparently, left no recognizable impression on it (as the Baron here looked and acted nothing like the part as played by Hans Albers, nor was the plot 'lifted' from some particular sketch in the episodic film). In fact, the short presents only a couple of incidents (presumably taken from the book which inspired the film version in the first place, and several others made before and after it): one in which the Baron's horse ends up dangling in the air from the façade of a building (seen in the front-cover illustration of the book from which Albers reads during the modern sequences in the film, though the episode itself is not re-enacted) and then when the two of them are chased by a hungry wolf in the snow, with the latter proceeding to swallow the horse in one gulp and replaces it in leading the Baron's sled!
    8SMK-4

    Magic with a dark side

    A much more interesting variation on the Münchhausen theme than Terry Gilliam would offer more than four decades later.

    It is filmed in colour and - despite being produced during WWII - no expense had been spared on the lavish sets and costumes. But this is not what this film is all about. As in Gilliam's film, this Münchhausen is a magical character, but it is not the magic you find in a modern animated Walt Disney spectacle, it is a magic with a dark side, a magic that can threaten and seduce and corrupt. Münchhausen himself comes across as an ambiguous character, charismatic and heroic, but by no means cuddly and lovable.

    As a result this is more a fairy tale for adults than one for children, and the full original version with nude harem girls, sexual innuendo, etc. wouldn't have passed the American censors of its day and probably still get an R rating today.
    9TheAnimalMother

    The Mysteriously Unknown Masterpiece

    When I look at how many people have rated this film, and I think of all the movie lovers out there who have never seen, or even heard of this delightful gem; It saddens me. I truly believe that it is among the greatest achievements in the history of film. The unique pastel colour is magnificent, and the film is filled with hilarious and daring moments. Especially when you consider that Münchhausen is a Nazi era 1943 German film; It really is hard to believe that this is true.

    Acclaimed director Terry Gilliam of Monty Python and 12 Monkey's fame, obviously tried to draw more attention to this striking wonder when he made his own version of this tale 'The Adventures Of Baron Munchausen' in 1988. If it wasn't for Mr.Gilliam, I probably would have never bothered to even watch this film. So I owe him many thanks as Münchhausen has easily become one of my all time favorite films. The pace, humour, and sheer originality of this fantasy make it one of the easiest subtitled films to watch in existence, period. It ranks up there with the greatest pre-1950's films such as The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre, and Chaplin's brilliant City Lights. If you love movies, if you love classic cinema, if you love original fantasy films, if you love humorous films; Seek out 1943's Münchhausen whatever you do. It will not disappoint. This film is certainly not for children. However, in terms of flat out fantasy entertainment, I would say that this nearly 70 year old antique blows away Peter Jackson's Lord Of The Rings films any day, and easily. Enough said.

    9/10
    georgi11811

    Humble review

    I found the film to be very enjoyable. I was impressed with the use of color. The film used Agfacolor film, which if memory serves me correctly was based on pastels, not at all like Technicolor.

    The film is very rich and vibrant in its cinematography and color, this is very much appreciated when one sees the work that went into the Moon set.

    Hans Albers plays an arrogant but lovable rogue who takes many, many years to learn the lesson of what is truly important in a mans life.

    I am in agreement with one reviewer in that this film is not at all for children and should be screened carefully, this is a European film and the Hayes Act didn't exist in Germany.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Writer Erich Kästner is widely reported to be billed as "Berthold Bürger" on this film, but there is in fact no writing credit at all. Kästner was a banned author in Nazi Germany and his books were among those burnt in 1933, which was the reason for the lack of writing credit here. Joseph Goebbels gave Kästner only a special permission to write a script, on which the author was actually named as Berthold Bürger. However he also give instruction to the German press never to mention the real author of the script nor to mention the name Berthold Bürger. Therefore no writing credits in the movie was used.
    • Patzer
      Sophia's "beauty spots" disappear and reappear during the opening scenes of the film.
    • Zitate

      Doge: I'm glad the balloon is to launch in Venice -- it will advance the cause of science, and provide entertainment for the people. The art of the statesman is, by doing one thing, to achieve two goals.

      François Blanchard: I serve only science, your Excellency.

      Doge: Of course, it's best for you to believe that. Let no one convince you otherwise.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The length of this film when submitted to the Film Review Office in March 1943, according to the Deutsches Filminstitut, was originally 134 minutes (or 3662 meters). This version was used for the premiere of the film at the Ufa-Palast am Zoo. Three months later, a second version (the general release version) was submitted, cut down to 118 minutes (3225 meters). After the war, the next version (December 1949) was 105 minutes, the 1954 version 101 minutes, the version for general audiences (shown that year) 88 minutes. In 1995, a first restoration was assembled by the F.W. Murnau Foundation, clocking in at 114 minutes. In 2017, a 35mm Agfacolor print was discovered at the Gosfilmofond of Russia. That print, which runs 131m (3590m), was restored and used for the 2019 Blu-ray release.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Die gefrorenen Blitze (1967)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 6. August 1943 (Ungarn)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Deutschland
    • Sprache
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
    • Drehorte
      • Berlin, Deutschland(environs)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Universum Film (UFA)
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 50 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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