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Letztes Jahr in Marienbad

Originaltitel: L'année dernière à Marienbad
  • 1961
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 34 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
26.163
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Giorgio Albertazzi, Sacha Pitoëff, and Delphine Seyrig in Letztes Jahr in Marienbad (1961)
Trailer for Last Year At Marienbad
trailer wiedergeben2:13
2 Videos
79 Fotos
Psychological DramaDramaMysteryRomance

In einem merkwürdigen und abgelegenen Schloss lernt ein Mann eine Frau kennen und besteht darauf, sie schon einmal getroffen zu haben.In einem merkwürdigen und abgelegenen Schloss lernt ein Mann eine Frau kennen und besteht darauf, sie schon einmal getroffen zu haben.In einem merkwürdigen und abgelegenen Schloss lernt ein Mann eine Frau kennen und besteht darauf, sie schon einmal getroffen zu haben.

  • Regie
    • Alain Resnais
  • Drehbuch
    • Alain Robbe-Grillet
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Delphine Seyrig
    • Giorgio Albertazzi
    • Sacha Pitoëff
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    26.163
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Alain Resnais
    • Drehbuch
      • Alain Robbe-Grillet
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Delphine Seyrig
      • Giorgio Albertazzi
      • Sacha Pitoëff
    • 163Benutzerrezensionen
    • 117Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 2 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    Last Year at Marienbad
    Trailer 2:13
    Last Year at Marienbad
    Last Year at Marienbad - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Last Year at Marienbad - Restoration Trailer
    Last Year at Marienbad - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Last Year at Marienbad - Restoration Trailer

    Fotos79

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    Topbesetzung16

    Ändern
    Delphine Seyrig
    Delphine Seyrig
    • La femme
    Giorgio Albertazzi
    Giorgio Albertazzi
    • Le narrateur
    Sacha Pitoëff
    Sacha Pitoëff
    • Le mari
    Françoise Bertin
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Luce Garcia-Ville
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Héléna Kornel
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Françoise Spira
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Karin Toeche-Mittler
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    • (as Karin Toche-Mittler)
    Pierre Barbaud
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Wilhelm von Deek
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Jean Lanier
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Gérard Lorin
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Davide Montemurri
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    • (as Davide Montemuri)
    Gilles Quéant
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Gabriel Werner
    • Un personnage de l'hôtel
    Alan Edwards
    • English Introduction
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Alain Resnais
    • Drehbuch
      • Alain Robbe-Grillet
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen163

    7,626.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    wperkins

    The Persistence of Memory

    The title of Dali's best known work is an apt description of this film. A man meets a woman at a European spa and tries to convince her (and himself) that they met one year ago. While the plot is simple, its presentation is not. I first saw L'annee derniere a Marienbad while taking a French Film class in college. Of the dozen or so films we watched, Marienbad has stayed with me the longest. The nameless protagonist's memories repeat, sometimes minutely changed, sometimes not. The same organ motifs echo again and again, all against the backdrop of elegant hallways and sitting rooms. Through all this, the man attempts to spirit the woman away from her husband/companion, while at the same time establish once and for all what happened last year and what did not. More than any other film, Marienbad has shown me the difference between American film conventions and what else is possible. While so many American releases are rigidly plot driven, Marienbad uses film as a tool for exploration and introspection. Instead of linear story telling, director Resnais allows his characters to explore the details of what may be memory or just imagination. Against a detached, almost stoical background of extras and cool interiors, Delphin Seyrig and Giorgio Albertazzi display a sharp contrast of passion, pleading, and denial. I agree with a previous reviewer that much of the look of Marienbad has been appropriated by commercials for perfume; however, if you haven't seen this film before, you most likely have never seen anything quite so surreal.
    louis-16

    A mystery, a love story, and a haunting exploration of memory

    Scenes at a European spa unfold while a man's mind tries to recollect a love affair of the past season. In one of the most deeply psychological films I have seen, memory itself seems to be the protagonist -- or is it the villain? What plot there is simply provides the material for a meditation on the uncertainty of knowing. The accomplishment of _Last Year at Marienbad_ is to make this point convincingly even in the case of that which one would not expect a man to have difficulty remembering: a sexual involvement and loss. It does so by a hypnotic combination of wheeling, dreamlike images of the resort's architecture and grounds, together with the incantatory, obsessive, recurrent tone of the narrative voice over. In doing this it also transforms a place where people go to be waited on and to play, into a labyrinth haunted by unsmiling shades, where remembering is both impossible and necessary.
    10Dave Godin

    Darker and more sinister than is generally reckoned

    It would take a braver person than me to delineate what LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD is `about', but as it is such an entirely thought provoking film, perhaps some sort of `meaning' can come from sharing these thoughts about it. Many people define it as cerebral and classical, but to me it is romantic and gothic. What is remarkable about the setting and the characters is that they are all so wealthy that they can rise above the concerns of ordinary mortals, only to find that this advantaged life brings other problems - of identity, purpose and values. They are strangely existentialist - the existentialism of great wealth - their small talk is intelligent, informed and stilted; they are all beautiful in the sense that money can partly buy beauty, and yet, in the process, they have lost human warmth, real sexual desire, and any purpose in life other than to drift on in their station in life. But desire is a respecter of nobody, and it is this element of human nature that haunts the corridors of the hotel like an invisible mist, and subconsciously their acutely civilised life-style which has bereaved them of something they no longer acknowledge or recognise and have deeply repressed - only to find it lingers on the fringes, confusing and disturbing them - spoiling everything; a depressive dissatisfaction. There is no joy, no enjoyment. The gardens become symbols of this desire to enslave, conquer and exile nature - formal, rigid and planned, and yet within the hotel, all around are decorative symbols of the chaotic and random aspects of nature. Everything appears to carry a symbol that needs to be interpreted - if it is there, it must have meaning, and if the Man says that they had arranged to elope together when they were at Marienbad, (or was it Marienbad, or elsewhere, and what does it matter?), how can the Woman be sure that this is not a ruse, made up to give immediate warning that we exile our emotions at our peril? That to acknowledge this for one second risks opening floodgates which will overwhelm and destroy? Or, that the ultimate expression of desire is death itself, as the film's closing line hints when the Man's voice speaks, over the night time silhouette of the hotel, of, `You.. and me.. together.. always.. in the night'. And it is an eternal night that we all subconsciously know lays in wait for us. The Great Leveller indeed! A remarkable film by any standards, and one which for me at least, is much darker and more sinister than has generally been recognised. But maybe it is just a springboard from which we can all set off on a journey guided by our own subconscious longings and dreads?
    8youllneverbe

    Experimental, visually exhilarating, and still polarising after nearly 50 years

    "Last Year at Marienbad" (1961) Dir.: Alain Resnais

    When it comes to cinema, I'm neither a philistine nor a scholar. I'm happy to read into a film's artistic context in preparation for watching it, but it must be self-evident, and not reliant upon anything but its own merit and communicability to be considered a success. In practice, this means I will certainly read the hype, but I won't necessarily believe it. And it's a good job, because "Last Year at Marienbad" remains one of the most hyped, discussed and debated movies of all time. People disagree over virtually everything about it - the pace, the narrative structure, the individual performances, the pretense, even the plot points. Yes, that's right, after forty-eight years people still argue over what actually happens in this film, let alone what it all means and how successfully it is presented to us. So I decided to ignore the minefields of audience opinion (which is largely positive anyway, if wildly diverse) and dive in without fuss, volunteering to watch this movie from the 'philistine' end of the spectrum and if I didn't like it, screw it. It's only one film anyway.

    When it became clear what I was watching, and how many traditional storytelling criteria were obviously not going to be fulfilled by "...Marienbad", I felt like I had burst in to the film's aristocratic country retreat wearing torn jeans and waving a bottle of tequila around, but ended up having an awesome time in a completely unexpected way. Make no mistake, I thoroughly enjoyed this movie. It is a near-perfect realisation of a very, very dense and ambitious concept, and Resnais should be proud that he and his film-making team were able to make it. It is stately, baffling, elegant, sinister and brilliant.

    Not that I could tell you what it's actually about, of course. Most people seem to think it's about the tricks and subjective nature of the memory, and the inherent flaws in how we cross-reference events with other events over time. These broad, elemental themes are the only ones I feel sure enough about to include in this review, which is illustrative of "Last Year at Marienbad"s disorienting effect. We are taken on an endless stroll through the rooms and corridors of a cold, strange country manor where the upper classes take their holidays and engage in card games and theatre. Their discussions are empty and meaningless, yet they go on forever. Time is not present in a recognisable form as the unnamed narrator loses track of how long he has been there, and how long he has attempted to persuade the unnamed woman that they met before, and that she had promised to run away with him. "Wait for one year," she'd supposedly said. "Next year I will leave with you." But the woman has no memory of him or her promise. She appears to be married to another man, who is tall, dour and imposing. Despite this, she keeps the unnamed narrator at arm's length, drawing him in and then pushing him back as if she does indeed remember something of him but is unwilling to accept it. His struggle to awaken some kind of acknowledgement of their shared past is the premise of the film.

    "Last Year at Marienbad" is a bizarre maze of half-recollections and inaccuracies, where words and events are repeated several times in different situations and everything we see is very possibly on an endless loop, eventually folding in on itself and collapsing into a kind of incomprehensible singularity. We have no frames of reference for what we are seeing other than what has already been seen, and we are never to know what's 'now' and what's a memory because the characters cross over between the two. As a result I found myself trying to draw a line between reality and false memory up to about half way through the film, after which I abandoned it as a futile exercise. This is one of its key strengths - it demands so much of the viewer that we are forced to build a structure for it in our own heads, and our efforts are routinely dashed.

    This all sounds terribly oblique and ridiculous, and in a sense it is; its detractors have regularly labelled it as such and that's a valid conclusion to reach. But it is spectacular on the eye, and this carried my attention right through the difficulties and to the end of the movie without so much as a pause. The camera sweeps down hallways and bursts out across garden terraces without even a jolt, it literally dances its way through the film as if it were another character. There are odd touches, too, that contribute to the striking atmosphere of the film, like Resnais' decision to have his supporting actors and extras remain completely static until they are speaking or in the company of the main three characters. He also skillfully breaks the pace by accelerating towards several shuddering climaxes in the last half of the film, which renew the viewer's attention and string us further along towards an ending that we hope will allow us something more definite to grasp.

    Whether it does or not, I will withhold. It's one of the many reasons to watch this film. But beware, it is genuinely challenging viewing – and in fact, its esotericism is the only reason I won't rate this higher than I have.
    eddie54

    A true science fiction classic

    Human-like aliens on a earth-like planet in a parallel universe. Life forms consist of about 50 or so replicants living in a luxurious hotel. They speak French, wear tuxedos and evening gowns, but their emotions are all but drained. They're very stiff and robotic. No one is seen eating food although they're always making plans for dinner. They enjoy posing, especially in gardens.

    The actual story involves a "rebel" known as X. He is the only one that exudes anything resembling human romantic desire. He takes a shine to a femalien known as A who is in residence with her lover/husband M. X realizes that M doesn't love A, so he feels it's alright to steal her away. All he had to do is convince A that she promised to go away with him a year ago and that she wanted one year to prepare. A doesn't remember the promise and X's efforts to convince her are like trying to unlock a door with a wet noodle. Love finally triumphs in the end as A eventually runs away with X in the night leaving M standing alone on the staircase with a blank expression.

    The director, Alain Resnais, is firmly quoted as saying that the film has no meaning. However, with so many people arguing that the film is loading with symbolism and is indeed much like a game or puzzle to be solved, I interpreted the film in a way that entertains me the most. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

    Hope you like it.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The match game in the movie is named as "Nim". In order to win the game there is only one tactic including a system called "Nim Sum". If both players use this tactic perfectly, then the owner of the first move will eventually lose. Due to the same reason, it is always disadvantageous to start the game first.
    • Patzer
      Exterior night scenes were shot day-for-night, but the sky and reflections of it were allowed in the frame, and they appear as bright white instead of black. This may have been intentional to emphasize the surreality of the film.
    • Zitate

      [X wanders through the hotel's corridors cataloging items he sees]

      X: Empty salons. Corridors. Salons. Doors. Doors. Salons. Empty chairs, deep armchairs, thick carpets. Heavy hangings. Stairs, steps. Steps, one after the other. Glass objects, objects still intact, empty glasses. A glass that falls, three, two, one, zero. Glass partition, letters.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A francia új hullám (1990)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 19. Oktober 1961 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Frankreich
      • Italien
    • Offizieller Standort
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Sprache
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Last Year at Marienbad
    • Drehorte
      • Nymphenburg Palace, München, Bayern, Deutschland
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Cocinor
      • Terra Film
      • Cormoran Films
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 207.917 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 15.485 $
      • 20. Jan. 2008
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 223.111 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 34 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Giorgio Albertazzi, Sacha Pitoëff, and Delphine Seyrig in Letztes Jahr in Marienbad (1961)
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