Ein deutscher Junge muss sich mit den Problemen des harten Lebens in Berlin unmittelbar nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg auseinandersetzen.Ein deutscher Junge muss sich mit den Problemen des harten Lebens in Berlin unmittelbar nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg auseinandersetzen.Ein deutscher Junge muss sich mit den Problemen des harten Lebens in Berlin unmittelbar nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg auseinandersetzen.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 wins total
- Edmund Köhler
- (as Edmund Meschke)
- Eva
- (as Ingetraud Hinz)
- Karl-Heinz
- (as Franz Grüger)
- Frau Rademaker
- (Nicht genannt)
- Thilde
- (Nicht genannt)
- Self
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
- (Synchronisation)
- (Nicht genannt)
- Il medico
- (Nicht genannt)
- Amica di Eva
- (Nicht genannt)
- Christl
- (Nicht genannt)
- La donna di generale
- (Nicht genannt)
- Rifugiata
- (Nicht genannt)
- Herr Rademaker
- (Nicht genannt)
- La figlia di Rademacher
- (Nicht genannt)
- Il generale von Laubniz
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Rossellini closes out his War Trilogy (after 1945's Rome Open City and 1946's Paisan) with this stark look at survival in a former war-zone. The actors are all non-professionals, and it shows, but one gets used to it, and Rossellini does a good job of keeping things within his performers' range. This is now the third film from 1948, following Berlin Express and A Foreign Affair, that I've watched recently that has been set in postwar Germany. Unlike those two, this one doesn't use the country as a backdrop for entertainment. Rather, this is an unflinching look into human misery and deprivation, and not for those looking for a good time. While I like the other two in Rossellini's trilogy more, this is still a very noteworthy, and recommended, film for those with the constitution for it.
This was on Criterion DVD, part of the Roberto Rossellini's War Trilogy box set, containing all 3 films. Each disc has loads of extras pertaining to that particular film, and the Germany Year Zero disc also has a feature-length documentary on Rossellini's life and career. Highly recommended to anyone with an interest in the man, his work, or international films of the mid-20th century.
Not only filmed in the very streets where a million died only months before, all those appearing in Stunde Null were quite clearly living the very experience they were enacting. These were not actors. Their performances are clumsy and strained without the polish of professional training or Hollywood editing. But that was the magic of this production. This was not drama but rather a window of reality. Their faces were scarred by the terrors they had just survived and one can only wonder at their courage to enact their own daily suffering for the entertainment of others.
The essence of the plot is simple enough. It is the story of ordinary German civilians trying to survive the starvation and deprivations of 1945 Berlin. The central character is a 12 year old boy, Edmund, who has to endure anything and everything in order to provide for his family. And in the end.....
Well nobody knows what really happened to Edmund Moeschke, the ex Hitler Jugend who was playing himself. After filming the external shots in Berlin the entire cast were taken to Rome in 1946 where the interior scenes were put together. And of course most of them attempted to remain there. Edmund disappeared from history and probably met his end somewhere in the Roman streets. Certainly he has never emerged to claim the accolades that would undoubtedly be poured upon him were he to only mention his name.
But Edmund will never be forgotten because his tragic story touches the soul and speaks for millions of other youngsters who were so cruelly sacrificed in that terrible conflict. This is not a film: it is a masterpiece.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesExteriors were shot in Germany, while all interiors were shot on a sound stage in Rome. When the German actors arrived in Rome, they ate pasta in abundance, something which the current economics of Germany could not afford. The German actors gained weight and shooting had to be postponed until they slimmed down to their original weights.
- PatzerWhen the father's coffin is taken away in a truck; there are five people consisting of family and friends running after the truck. The position as they run is first Karl-Heinz, then a male companion, then Eva is close behind the male companion, and staggering well behind are two women. However when it cuts to a mid-shot; Eva now ends up much further back in the fourth position.
- Zitate
Narrator: This movie, shot in Berlin in the summer of 1947 aims only to be an objective and true portrait of this large, almost totally destroyed city where 3.5 million people live a terrible, desperate life, almost without realizing it. They live as if tragedy were natural, not because of strength or faith, but because they are tired. This is not an accusation or even a defense of the German people. It is an objective assessment. Yet if anyone, after watching Edmund Koeler's story, feels that something needs to be done-that German children need to relearn to love life-then the efforts of those who made this movie will be greatly rewarded.
- Alternative VersionenThe Italian version has some extra footage of the city of Berlin destroyed at the beginning of the movie with a introduction cardboard.
- VerbindungenEdited into Geschichte(n) des Kinos: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Germany Year Zero
- Drehorte
- Berlin, Deutschland(Exterior)
- Produktionsfirmen
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 12.195 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 18 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1