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Das Lied der Straße

Originaltitel: La strada
  • 1954
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 48 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,0/10
68.759
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Das Lied der Straße (1954)
Trailer for La Strada
trailer wiedergeben1:34
2 Videos
99+ Fotos
Eine TragödieErwachsenwerdenDrama

Ein unbekümmertes Mädchen wird an einen fahrenden Schausteller verkauft und muss unterwegs körperliche und emotionale Schmerzen ertragen.Ein unbekümmertes Mädchen wird an einen fahrenden Schausteller verkauft und muss unterwegs körperliche und emotionale Schmerzen ertragen.Ein unbekümmertes Mädchen wird an einen fahrenden Schausteller verkauft und muss unterwegs körperliche und emotionale Schmerzen ertragen.

  • Regie
    • Federico Fellini
  • Drehbuch
    • Federico Fellini
    • Tullio Pinelli
    • Ennio Flaiano
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Anthony Quinn
    • Giulietta Masina
    • Richard Basehart
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,0/10
    68.759
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Federico Fellini
    • Drehbuch
      • Federico Fellini
      • Tullio Pinelli
      • Ennio Flaiano
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Anthony Quinn
      • Giulietta Masina
      • Richard Basehart
    • 188Benutzerrezensionen
    • 119Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 12 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    La Strada
    Trailer 1:34
    La Strada
    Cate Blanchett and Director James Gray Connect on Great Films About Hope
    Video 12:08
    Cate Blanchett and Director James Gray Connect on Great Films About Hope
    Cate Blanchett and Director James Gray Connect on Great Films About Hope
    Video 12:08
    Cate Blanchett and Director James Gray Connect on Great Films About Hope

    Fotos100

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    Topbesetzung15

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    Anthony Quinn
    Anthony Quinn
    • Zampanò
    Giulietta Masina
    Giulietta Masina
    • Gelsomina
    Richard Basehart
    Richard Basehart
    • Il matto
    Aldo Silvani
    Aldo Silvani
    • Colombaioni detto 'Signor Giraffa'
    Marcella Rovena
    Marcella Rovena
    • La vedova
    Livia Venturini
    • La suorina
    Pietro Ceccarelli
    • Il proprietario dell'osteria
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Giovanna Galli
    • La prostututa all'osteria
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gustavo Giorgi
      Yami Kamadeva
      • Un prostituta
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Mario Passante
      Mario Passante
      • Il cameriere
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Anna Primula
      • La madre di Gelsomina
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Alexandre Trannoy
      • Il giocoliere
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Goffredo Unger
      Goffredo Unger
      • Un uomo che trattiene Zampano
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Nazzareno Zamperla
      Nazzareno Zamperla
      • Un uomo che trattiene Zampano
      • (Nicht genannt)
      • Regie
        • Federico Fellini
      • Drehbuch
        • Federico Fellini
        • Tullio Pinelli
        • Ennio Flaiano
      • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
      • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

      Benutzerrezensionen188

      8,068.7K
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      Empfohlene Bewertungen

      9artzau

      Fantastic, fantastic, fantastic!

      I saw this film in 1954 and every Fellini film since. Basehart and Quinn under Fellini's skillful direction add a chemistry to Masina's portrayal of innocence that is incredible. I would argue this is Fellini's best film. Everything works. It is so full of little things, from the farm folk hired as extras to the rubber boots worn by Quinn striding into the ring to do his corny strongman act. Fellini nearly drove Masina crazy during the filming-- he wouldn't let her bath or wash her hair for weeks on end-- but, the end result speaks for itself. There are some excellent comments on this film elsewhere in this section. I suggest you read them. I can only say, this is one of the great films.
      sparkability

      Pure, surreal, a treat for the mind and heart

      Often it is hard to find a romance which does not include actual romance - i.e. - liplock, hugging scenes. The viewer is overflowed with emotion because the film itself focuses on human emotion, and is a pure amusement to watch because of the many symbols. When Zampano tries to steal a silver heart from the church and Gelsomina pleads with him not to, we can only think of the cold silver heart, his sad action of trying to "steal" such an emotion as "love", Gelsomina's soft nature - this film overflows with such subtleties, but such subtleties! so impactful in conveying emotion..

      Gelsomina's faith to Zampano is heartwrenching - she is presented with opportunities to leave Zampano, such as leaving to the nunnery or joining the circus, but she declines all. This fidelity builds up, only to have.. well, let's just say that Fellini is especially skillful in drawing your sympathy and then channeling for it in a single scene.. he knows how to focus and concentrate your emotion, I felt sort of violated after watching the film, since I rarely cry for movies! Also, if the symbolism does not stir a reader to interest, the amazing cinematography will. The tightrope act atop the city buildings, the motorbike rides, the Christ ceremony-

      This movie is unpredictable and is interesting to watch, since it keeps the mind afloat with the different scenes which are packed with symbols and metaphors, wonderful puzzles to decipher. Since Fellini does not present it straight-forwardly, and rather wraps meaning in several layers of symbols, uncovering the truth becomes fulfilling for the viewer.

      The way Fellini develops his characters is unforgettable. We feel their demise, but urge to see and understand more. I feel only Fellini can accomplish such a remarkable quality. And in case you didn't get the gist of my rating (and my ranting).. 4 stars. Please rent this and enjoy, Fellini's incredible! :o)
      jmoulder

      La Strada: Fellini's masterpiece

      It is the early sixties in Annapolis, Maryland. Although a Third Class Petty Officer in the Navy, I am still in my teens & have never sampled the cinema except for what Hollywood has had to offer. I have just stumbled out of a theater & I am stunned yet aware that I have just witnessed a work of art that was devoid of compromise. That work was La Strada, a cinematic creation directed by Federico Fellini. I have viewed this film several times since but it never pales & each time I take away something new. In this post I'll concentrate on the main characters & some of the cast.

      Anthony Quinn was perfect for the role of Zampano, the grubby strongman performer touring the villages & countryside of post-WW2 Italy. No other actor of the day could have possibly brought what Quinn brings to the role. There may have been some European actor who would not have shamed himself in the part, but I can't think of who it might have been & certainly no actor known by Hollywood could have done so well as Quinn. One has to resort to other eras & reach far into the imagination to attempt such speculation. If Wallace or Noah Beery, sr. could have managed a not too corrupted Italian persona; perhaps. If Gilbert Roland had lifted weights & taken supplements for a year; maybe. Victor McLaglen could never have passed for Italian – don't laugh – he had the rugged looks & the physique. Ricardo Montalban? Too handsome. Ditto, Victor Mature. Mitchum was way too 'American.' Nehemiah Persoff, Eli Wallach, Telly Savalas, Rod Steiger, Karl Malden, even Van Heflin, all considered, all rejected. Brando might have been credible. One remembers "A Streetcar Named Desire" & "On the Waterfront" & thinks: Possibly. But Quinn plays the role as if it was what he was put on earth to do.

      Quinn's Zampano is earthily callous yet the viewer senses vulnerability buried deep within the character. Among other facets his perfect performance presents to the viewer is a faintly perceived inkling of past disappointments, of indirectly inferred reasons that Zampano is cruel & insensitive. Quinn's consummate technique paints the broad picture of a lout yet the viewer is able to pull a slender thread of sympathy from his character & that sympathy is necessary for the end of the movie. To be very bad & to still be likable, if only barely, is produced by Quinn as if it were a gift to the viewer. It is acting on the highest possible plane.

      Giulietta Masina plays Gelsomina, a tattered urchin Zampano purchases from her poverty-bested mother. Here too, the viewer witnesses genius of casting. Masina's face is one of Fellini's main canvases in the film. It mugs, it displays pride, love & resignation in fleeting cascades of expression, sometimes all within a second. Even without the plasticity of her face her body alone would be enough to write volumes for the viewer. It gambols, prances, pratfalls & cunningly sneaks, sometimes at breakneck speed though the viewer's eye is never allowed to blur these perceptions despite the rapidity of much of the execution.

      Richard Basehart plays the Fool, foil to Quinn's brute. Whereas Quinn's act subsists on feats of strength, Basehart's character is all about finesse: juggling, acrobatics & tightrope-walking. Zampano is awkward on those occasions that he attempts real affection toward Gelsomina. The Fool is light strokes of joviality; joking & flirting is his natural mode. Zampano's voice is gruff and in the baritone range; Basehart's lines are delivered high-pitched, with a lilting modulation. However, just as Zampano has an almost hidden vein of sensitivity, Basehart imbues his lighthearted portrayal with a close to imperceptible strand of hardness.

      The vehicle of the plot is a journey, but a journey with no particular physical destination. In a work such as "Huckleberry Finn" Twain provides a direction(down-river with the current). Here the characters appear to wander aimlessly from place to place, seemingly interacting by chance with whoever they meet & somehow this very lack of goal helps to give the piece a lifelike aura of randomness. The viewer becomes unaware of watching a film. Like all truly great works of art, technique never intrudes & the viewer could be a fly on the wall.

      This lack of artificiality allows the viewer to be fully immersed in the unfolding events. The landscape is the blasted Italian environment just after WW2 & is symbolic of the work's bleak message. The camera rolls on weeds, shacks, broken concrete, poorly maintained roadways, dry, desolate hinterlands & famine-ridden villages. There is no looking away allowed, the viewer is made to see, forced to behold stark realities.

      It is impossible to say exactly what makes this film a masterpiece. By a mysterious & perhaps lucky combination of ingredients it propels itself into the highest circle of cinema. The end is emotionally wrenching & I would venture that few are able to leave it as I did long ago in Annapolis without a sense of having been deeply moved.
      10phatdan

      To film as Bach is to music

      La Strada brings two souls together to tell a story that ultimately displays humanity's finer aspects. The title gives a clue to the meaning of Fellini's masterpiece: The Way. The brute, Zampano, buys the urchin-like Gelsomina to be his traveling companion in his one-man carnival act. He is physically and emotionally cruel to her. Her longing to love and be loved, and her child-like, yet acute perception of life, and desire to live it, despite hardships, makes her the perfect complement to the selfish and despicable Zampano. Their unification affects each other. However, although Zampano's harshness adversely effects Gelsomina's life, it is her influence that will eventually, and more significantly, change him. This may sound like the familiar Beauty and the Beast fairy tale, but it is more than a love story. It is about love, but it isn't until the very end of the film that we realize it. More than love, it is about a man who gains insight and awareness because of love. It is his finale transformation that demonstrates both the frailty and vitality of the human condition. It overpoweringly suggests that the individual, no matter how depraved, is able to spiritually evolve.

      Every frame and scene in this masterpiece has purpose and meaning.
      8mattreviews

      A beautiful insight ... Masina makes the film her own

      La Strada can sometimes come across as similar to the Hollywood films made in the 1950s, but for the most part, is a unique and beautiful story. It concerns a young woman, Gelsomina, being given to traveling "artist" Zampano by her poor mother in exchange for money. Zampano makes his money by traveling around Italy, putting on a strong-man show for crowds. Gelsomina has dreams of becoming an artist as well, and therefore was more than happy to go with Zampano, but Gelsomina quickly realises that Zampano is nothing more than a drunkard and a brute, with eating, sleeping and sex being the only things he cares for.

      The character of Gelsomina, played by Giulietta Masina, is the highlight of the film. With a face like no other, it exudes a certain beauty but is also very odd, with a definite quirkiness to it …"like an artichoke". Masina is excellent as expressing emotions with nothing more than a look, and it is because of this that the film stands strong. The story itself is simple, but with Gelsomina being such a romantic at heart, she is constantly searching for love and an understanding of a world she doesn't know, being such a sheltered loner when living with her mother and four younger sisters.

      Zampano, the traveling strong-man, follows the basic of human instincts, irrespective of their bearing on others, namely Gelsomina. Anthony Quinn gives the character a great ignorance, Zampano being, for the most part, oblivious to the impact his actions have, only wanting to be able to earn money to eat and drink wine, and sleep with women. It is not until Zampano and Gelsomina (Gelsomina having become Zampano's sidekick in his traveling show) take on a position as part of a circus in town, and Gelsomina meets an acrobat clown, credited in the film as Il Matto – The Fool. She falls for his happy and carefree nature, exampled when he teases Zampano whilst he is trying to do his show. Zampano soon despises the Fool, and becomes jealous of the friendship forming between Gelsomina and the clown. This is where Zampano begins to show real emotion, and although he doesn't deal with the situation in the most appropriate way, it is the beginning of his life experience that changes him forever.

      The film is gorgeous, with some memorable characters, namely Gelsomina. It doesn't end on a happy note, but you are still left satisfied with the story told, especially the lesson taught to Zampano, although it was all too late for him, and it is not certain that he learned from the experience. Masina is an absolute delight to watch, holding you captive with her face alone, beaming with love. The film is not for those looking for Hollywood drama and action, but for anyone who knows how it feels to be confused and in need of understanding about life's ways.

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      Handlung

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      • Wissenswertes
        Anthony Quinn was working on a film with Giulietta Masina (Donne Proibite - 1954) when she introduced him to her husband, Federico Fellini. He was immediately convinced that the Mexican-born actor would make the perfect Zampanò the strongman in his new film, which was to become Das Lied der Straße (1954), and implored him to accept the role. The nonplussed actor, who had no idea who Fellini was, initially turned him down, but Fellini was persistent, pestering him for days about the project. Shortly thereafter, Quinn spent the evening with Ingrid Bergman and her husband, director Roberto Rossellini. After dinner, the three watched Fellini's most recent film, the comedy-drama Die Müßiggänger (1953), and Quinn realized with astonishment that the crazy Italian filmmaker who had been hounding him for days was a genius.
      • Patzer
        When Zampanò meets The Fool while he is repairing a flat tire on his car, the left front wheel is removed and the car is jacked. Right after the altercation, when Zampanò pushes The Fool's car, the wheel rim is back and not jacked anymore.
      • Zitate

        The Fool: If you won't stay with him, who will? I'm an ignorant man, but I've read a book or two. You may not believe it, but everything in this world has a purpose. Even this pebble, for example.

        Gelsomina: Which one?

        The Fool: This one. Any one. But even this one has a purpose.

        Gelsomina: What's its purpose?

        The Fool: Its purpose is - how should I know? If I knew, I'd be...

        Gelsomina: Who?

        The Fool: The Almighty, who knows everything. When you're born. When you die. Who knows? No, I don't know what this pebble's purpose is, but it must have one, because if this pebble has no purpose, then everything is pointless. Even the stars! At least, I think so. And you too. You have a purpose too.

      • Alternative Versionen
        The German theatrical version was cut by about 6 minutes to speed up the films pacing. DVD release also contains the Italian uncut version as a bonus feature.
      • Verbindungen
        Edited into Geschichte(n) des Kinos: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)
      • Soundtracks
        La Strada Love Theme
        (1954) (uncredited)

        Music by Nino Rota and Michele Galdieri

        Published by Leeds

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      FAQ17

      • How long is La Strada?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Ändern
      • Erscheinungsdatum
        • 28. August 1956 (Westdeutschland)
      • Herkunftsland
        • Italien
      • Sprache
        • Italienisch
      • Auch bekannt als
        • La Strada - Das Lied der Straße
      • Drehorte
        • Via Corinto, Rom, Latium, Italien(Gelsomina waiting for Zampano to come out of police station)
      • Produktionsfirma
        • Ponti-De Laurentiis Cinematografica
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      Box Office

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      • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
        • 41.362 $
      Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

      Technische Daten

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      • Laufzeit
        • 1 Std. 48 Min.(108 min)
      • Farbe
        • Black and White
      • Seitenverhältnis
        • 1.37 : 1

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