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Carrie

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 58 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
2865
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Carrie (1952)
Official Trailer
trailer wiedergeben1:16
1 Video
95 Fotos
Period DramaDramaRomance

George Hurstwood ist ein ehrbarer Familienvater in komfortablen Lebensumständen. Doch aus Liebe zu Carrie gibt er alles auf.George Hurstwood ist ein ehrbarer Familienvater in komfortablen Lebensumständen. Doch aus Liebe zu Carrie gibt er alles auf.George Hurstwood ist ein ehrbarer Familienvater in komfortablen Lebensumständen. Doch aus Liebe zu Carrie gibt er alles auf.

  • Regie
    • William Wyler
  • Drehbuch
    • Theodore Dreiser
    • Ruth Goetz
    • Augustus Goetz
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Laurence Olivier
    • Jennifer Jones
    • Miriam Hopkins
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    2865
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • William Wyler
    • Drehbuch
      • Theodore Dreiser
      • Ruth Goetz
      • Augustus Goetz
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Laurence Olivier
      • Jennifer Jones
      • Miriam Hopkins
    • 49Benutzerrezensionen
    • 28Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 1 Gewinn & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Carrie
    Trailer 1:16
    Carrie

    Fotos95

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    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Laurence Olivier
    Laurence Olivier
    • George Hurstwood
    Jennifer Jones
    Jennifer Jones
    • Carrie Meeber
    Miriam Hopkins
    Miriam Hopkins
    • Julie Hurstwood
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Charles Drouet
    Basil Ruysdael
    Basil Ruysdael
    • Mr. Fitzgerald
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Allen
    Barry Kelley
    Barry Kelley
    • Slawson
    Sara Berner
    Sara Berner
    • Mrs. Oransky
    William Reynolds
    William Reynolds
    • George Hurstwood, Jr.
    • (as William Regnolds)
    Mary Murphy
    Mary Murphy
    • Jessica Hurstwood
    Harry Hayden
    • O'Brien
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Factory Foreman
    Walter Baldwin
    Walter Baldwin
    • Carrie's Father
    Dorothy Adams
    Dorothy Adams
    • Carrie's Mother
    Jacqueline deWit
    Jacqueline deWit
    • Carrie's Sister Minnie
    • (as Jacqueline de Witt)
    Harlan Briggs
    Harlan Briggs
    • Joe Brant
    Melinda Casey
    • Little Girl
    • (as Melinda Plowman)
    Donald Kerr
    • Slawson's Bartender
    • Regie
      • William Wyler
    • Drehbuch
      • Theodore Dreiser
      • Ruth Goetz
      • Augustus Goetz
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen49

    7,32.8K
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    9jan-conant2

    Romance At Its Best

    I read the book at 17 and picked it up again. I remember seeing the film many years ago and decided to buy the video. What a find. I had never realized how romantic Sir Olivier could be. Talk about how desperate love can destroy a life at any age. When George Hurstwood, a wealthy manager of a prominent drinking establishment meets naive, trusting Carrie Meeber from Columbia City he is smitten. Right from the moment he spies her entering the men's bar entrance you know from his eyes he is hooked. When he attempts to seduce her away from Charles Drouet I believe he plans to just keep her as a mistress to satisfy his need for love. When he finds she is not to be won over he must sacrifice everything to have her, including forfeiting his property and assets to a shrew of a wife, played unmercifully by Miriam Hopkins.

    Olivier's eyes are captivating in every scene with Jennifer Jones, his manners are impeccable the chemistry between them is dazzling. Watch his eyes especially when Carrie declares her love for him in the park. I love this film and it is much more idealistic than the book which describes Carrie as disillusioned when Hurstwood can't support her and thinks him old and useless. In the film her love endures even in poverty. When Hurstwood's son surfaces Carrie encourages him to seek him out for help and decides to leave only for his benefit.

    Carrie is not portrayed in the film as the selfish character in Dreiser's novel. You truly believe her love for Hurstwood but at what cost. Hurstwood has the class and wealth Carrie is looking for. Problem is she loves nice things and her respectability is compromised when thinking Hurstwood unmarried chooses him. Jennifer Jones is marvelous going from a poor young, innocent girl with an education but it's her looks that help her along. Eddie Albert is fine as the self assured drummer who wins her over with his charm. I also picked up on the "green acres" bit. It's Olivier who steals the film, going from a respectable gentleman to a tragic figure who holds onto his dignity to the end. For all you romantics see this film. It's fifty years old and Olivier and Jones can still burn up the screen.
    7dbdumonteil

    the missing link between Stahl and Sirk.

    Melodrama had come a long way between the thirties austere black and white Stahl tear-jerkers to the fifties flaming Sirk extravaganzas ,which were often remakes of the first director's works ( "when tomorrow comes" "imitation of life" "magnificent obsession")

    At the beginning of the fifties ,Wyler -who had already approached melodrama ("Mrs Minniver","little foxes" and even elements of his admirable "best years of our lives) opted for full bore weepie,the "enough is enough" genre and thus anticipated on the great maudlin movies of the fifties which was another golden era for the style,not only Douglas Sirk but also Minelli,Cukor,Dmytryk ,King... Jennifer Jones ,the romantic actress par excellence ,is the bridge between the two eras:she has nothing to do with Irene Dunne or Margaret Sullavan because she's primarily an intuitive:her face is constantly longing for the love which ceaselessly eludes her :no actress succeeded as she did as far romantic passion is concerned ("duel in the sun" "madame Bovary" "Ruby Gentry" are good examples).

    And yet,despite the title,the plot focuses on Olivier's character.the great thespian is very moving,going from riches to rag with equal command.The plot encompasses everything that makes a melodrama a delight for afficionados of the genre.Olivier's downfall is almost realist -and sometimes recalls Murnau's "der Letzte Mann" (1924).Wyler depicts his plight and humiliation in lavish detail .That's strange,because ,generally ,man is spared in melodramas .

    The legendary depth of field you can find in any Wyler movie is used with great results in the scenes when Carrie comes for the first time in the luxury restaurant where she's invited.
    8blanche-2

    beautifully made drama with a staggering performance by Olivier

    Not for nothing is Laurence Olivier heralded as one of the greatest actors of our time, and if ever a film proved it, it's "Carrie," an adaptation of Theodore Dreiser's "Sister Carrie." Dreiser is the man who brought us "An American Tragedy," remade as "A Place in the Sun." Poor Dreiser - he must have been one miserable human being to write such stories of man's desolation.

    "Carrie" is the story of a distinguished man, George Hurstwood (Olivier) who runs a large Chicago restaurant, and how his obsession with a beautiful young woman, Carrie (Jennifer Jones) destroys his social standing, his reputation, and his life.

    Miserable in a loveless marriage to Julie (Miriam Hopkins), George meets Carrie while she is living with a salesman, Charlie (Eddie Albert). One thing that the film points out is that there were so very few opportunities for women in the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th.

    After losing her job due to injury at a shoe-making factory, Carrie drifts into friendship and then is seduced into a relationship with Charlie. She is never comfortable with the arrangement and wants to get married.

    Very naive and inexperienced at life, when she falls in love with George, she expects him to marry her, not realizing that he's already married. An angry, vicious Julie goes to George's boss with the tale of her husband's immorality.

    After a confrontation with his boss and Julie, George panics, takes money he intended to give to the restaurant owner, and runs away with Carrie. Thus, he becomes a fugitive. But his troubles are just beginning.

    William Wyler skillfully directed this film, which has one of Olivier's best screen performances as George. "I want love!" he screams at his wife. "And I intend to have that before I die!"

    Desperate, obsessed, weak, but proud, Olivier gives a fully fleshed-out portrayal of a man at the end of his rope whose great passion - in a more devastating way - will ruin his life almost as surely as his suppression of passion would have. How he wasn't nominated for an Oscar is a true mystery; it is one of the all-time great film portrayals. He will break your heart.

    As Carrie, Jennifer Jones is excellent as an unhappy young woman who, because of poverty, innocence, and George's determination, is dragged into a downward spiral. She is dazzlingly beautiful and one can see her grow from a vapid, victimized girl into a woman who hides her resentment and has a strong resolve.

    Jones has been criticized for being passive in this part - but it's a passive role. She's a young country girl in the big city at a time when society was totally male-oriented and most doors were closed to her. She is the cause of George's destruction, but not on purpose. George is such a weak man that the only type of person he could ever dominate would be someone like Carrie - and finally, he isn't even able to dominate her.

    Hopkins was a master at playing a shrew, but more than that, she was a brilliant actress who knew the art of playing period pieces, as she demonstrated so admirably in "The Heiress." Eddie Albert is good in the familiar role of a likable salesman, but it had an added twist - this one had ulterior motives, but he was so smiley and gregarious, you almost couldn't believe it.

    Well worth seeing but have a box of tissues nearby. You'll ask yourself, too, how Olivier and the film could have been overlooked at Oscar time.
    10jandesimpson

    The Hollywood studio system at its finest

    At a time when many cineasts are beginning to respond to the beauties of Powell and Pressburger's "Gone to Earth", Wyler's "Carrie", that other most underrated masterpiece, continues to attract too little appreciative attention. It is not difficult to see why insofar that its depressing subject material is incompatible with audience expectations of its genre, Hollywood studio romanticism. It has a hero who slides into despair and degradation whilst the heroine succeeds in her chosen profession as an aspiring actress. Women who take their handkerchiefs to the cinema have always seemed indifferent to the film: indeed the only admirers I have personally found have been male, possibly identifying with the debonaire restaurateur, Hurstwood (magnificently played by Laurence Olivier), sowing the seeds of his downfall through human weakness which destroys everything except his innate dignity. Had the film been set in its own period (mid 20th century) and directed by, say, a De Sica or Kurosawa, we might still be talking about it. Instead it is set shortly after the beginning of the century, a transitional period when the romantic past was rapidly being overcome by the grainy realism of a new mechanised age. However, far from being weakened by the genre conventions of a highly romantic approach,the superbly crafted direction by William Wyler, photography perfectly composed by Victor Milner and a wonderfully lyrical score by David Raksin are elements that serve to enhance the material. They never sentimentalise it, somehow proving that when as here the Hollywood romantic cinema was given a really mature theme and text, it could, in the hands of some of its greatest craftsmen, be responsible for producing a work of the highest cinematic art.
    8ccthemovieman-1

    Olivier Elevates This Solid Soaper Big-Time

    This was a pretty powerful melodrama, thanks to the great performance of Sir Laurence Olivier.

    Olivier plays an unhappily-married older man who falls for the young and beautiful Jennifer Jones (not hard to understand!).....and pays a huge price for his adultery. Olivier is near-mesmerizing in this film and Jones is absolutely gorgeous, as she was in "Portrait Of Jennie," made about five years prior to this film.

    Eddie Albert was a bit annoying (but effective) in his role and Miriam Hopkins is downright brutal in her small part as Olivier's wife.

    The shocking thing about this film was the subject matter, rare for its day. It was ahead of its day in one respect: it makes the adulterers into the sympathetic "good guys." I'm surprised that got by the censors of the day. Jones' character is oddly innocent for someone "shacking up" with Albert.

    I am not a fan of soap operas, but this was highly involving, a tough story to put down once it started I didn't particularly like the ending, but are you gonna do? Note: One of the scenes near the end was inserted on the DVD. It had previously been cut out of the theatrical release. That "flophouse" scene was one that was not passed over by the censors.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Sir Laurence Olivier accepted the part of George Hurstwood in order to be in Hollywood at the same time that his emotionally troubled wife Vivien Leigh was making Endstation Sehnsucht (1951), so that he could look after her.
    • Patzer
      In the theater, when George is returning the ten dollars to Carrie, he puts the bill inside her purse in the closeup. When the camera changes angles, the bill is on the table again.
    • Zitate

      George Hurstwood: You still have time, Carrie. Move on now. Find someone... to love. It's a great experience, Carrie.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The 2004 DVD version contain the deleted "flophouse" scene never seen by the audience in the US. This sequence was removed at the film release due to the political state of affairs in the US during this era. Chapter 16 contains that scene.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Geschichte(n) des Kinos: Seul le cinéma (1994)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1953 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Sefahat Kurbanı
    • Drehorte
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Paramount Pictures
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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 58 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
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