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Blumen ohne Duft

Originaltitel: Beyond the Valley of the Dolls
  • 1970
  • 18
  • 1 Std. 49 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,1/10
12.664
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Erica Gavin in Blumen ohne Duft (1970)
Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben2:01
1 Video
99+ Fotos
ParodieSatireDramaKomödieMusik

Drei Mädchen kommen nach Hollywood, um groß rauszukommen, finden aber nur Sex, Drogen und Abschaum.Drei Mädchen kommen nach Hollywood, um groß rauszukommen, finden aber nur Sex, Drogen und Abschaum.Drei Mädchen kommen nach Hollywood, um groß rauszukommen, finden aber nur Sex, Drogen und Abschaum.

  • Regie
    • Russ Meyer
  • Drehbuch
    • Roger Ebert
    • Russ Meyer
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Dolly Read
    • Cynthia Myers
    • Marcia McBroom
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,1/10
    12.664
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Russ Meyer
    • Drehbuch
      • Roger Ebert
      • Russ Meyer
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Dolly Read
      • Cynthia Myers
      • Marcia McBroom
    • 171Benutzerrezensionen
    • 100Kritische Rezensionen
    • 60Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:01
    Trailer

    Fotos215

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    Topbesetzung58

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    Dolly Read
    Dolly Read
    • Kelly Mac Namara
    Cynthia Myers
    Cynthia Myers
    • Casey Anderson
    Marcia McBroom
    • Petronella Danforth
    John Lazar
    John Lazar
    • Ronnie (Z-Man) Barzell
    • (as John LaZar)
    Michael Blodgett
    Michael Blodgett
    • Lance Rocke
    David Gurian
    David Gurian
    • Harris Allsworth
    Edy Williams
    Edy Williams
    • Ashley St. Ives
    Erica Gavin
    Erica Gavin
    • Roxanne
    Phyllis Davis
    Phyllis Davis
    • Susan Lake
    Harrison Page
    Harrison Page
    • Emerson Thorne
    Duncan McLeod
    • Porter Hall
    James Iglehart
    James Iglehart
    • Randy Black
    • (as Jim Iglehart)
    Charles Napier
    Charles Napier
    • Baxter Wolfe
    Henry Rowland
    Henry Rowland
    • Otto
    Princess Livingston
    Princess Livingston
    • Matron
    Stan Ross
    Stan Ross
    • Disciple
    Lavelle Roby
    Lavelle Roby
    • Vanessa
    Angel Ray
    • Girl in Tub
    • Regie
      • Russ Meyer
    • Drehbuch
      • Roger Ebert
      • Russ Meyer
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen171

    6,112.6K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    jbels

    Not fun at all

    This movie really tested my patience and I went to see it after Ebert waxed poetic about it in a two page article in the Sun Times. It's not enjoyable camp like Rocky Horror and it really says or adds nothing to the original Valley of the Dolls. It's just dumb and wears thin very quickly.
    6susansweb

    To me - a fun movie, To my wife - not much fun

    I liked this movie but I was prepared, having read about it extensively before seeing it. From the soundtrack to the camera and editing tricks to the performances, I liked it all. My only problem was the middle part of the movie which concentrated on the personal troubles of the band, sort of dragged. Only when John Lazar came back did the movie pick up and I guess I'm in the minority because I liked the ending. Mainly, because it took the outrageous flavor from the beginning and went even farther. The casting was especially noteworthy. Normally, people who can't act really bother me but watching all of the Playboy playmates trying to act serious while spouting out hilariously clichéd dialogue (I can only hope that Roger Ebert and Russ Meyer weren't trying to write authentic dialogue) was very funny. Special note must be given to the drummer trying to pretend that she could really play. Only Lazar came off as a real actor and he tackled his role with gusto. It is a shame to see that he has never really done anything worthy of his talents after this. Having seen this film only once I don't know how it would hold up after repeated viewings but I can say it is worth seeing at least once.
    9brefane

    The Citizen Kane of camp.

    Russ Meyer's most lavish production is still jaw dropping, and still beyond comparison. BTVOTD is the ultimate camp film that, unlike Valley of the Dolls, is knowingly campy, deliberately absurd, never comes down to earth, and achieves a non stop contact high. Beyond description, it must be seen to be believed. A rapid fire, mind-rending parody of virtually every genre and cliché squeezed into a 2 hour film which hasn't aged a bit and has seen its reputation grow since its initial release in 1970. The songs, dialog, direction, editing, music, and acting all provide endless amazement every time I see it. In the 30 plus years since its release nothing else comes close to the experience of this film. Even more than The Rocky Horror Picture Show, BEYOND is a true audience film with so many lines and scenes that viewers have memorized. BEYOND is and was ahead of its time, and remains essential viewing.
    spearsdws

    Loved it, except for the lousy ending.

    I don't know why I feel so compelled to write about this movie. I had seen "BVD" a couple of years back and recently rented it again. In one weekend, I watched it three times. I love the color, the music, the whiz-bang editing, the campy dramatics...it would be a true classic if not for one thing: the distasteful, disastrous ending. "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" is soft-core auteur Russ Meyer's drug-drenched, sex-soaked parody of "Valley of the Dolls," the film based on Jacqueline Susann's best-selling novel of the same name. Whereas "Valley of the Dolls" is unintentional camp, "BVD" is intentional camp. It lampoons the southern Californian "scene" in the late '60's by relating the adventures of the three members of a girl band who find fame and fortune in Hollywood. "Sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll" is the main theme here; the secondary theme is "voluptuous, scantily-clad starlets displaying miles of cleavage." (This is, after all, a Russ Meyer film!) Those discriminating viewers seeking insightful social commentary, three-dimensional characters, and plot twists that actually make sense had better look elsewhere. The plot concerns the previously mentioned trio of female rockers and their escapades in La-La Land. Pet, Kelly, Casey, and Harris, the band's manager (and Kelly's boyfriend) make it to Los Angeles after a two-minute montage of them groovily singing their way across the country. Kelly is reunited with her long-lost aunt who takes the girls to a wild, swingin' party at the home of Ronnie Barzell, a rock promoter; Barzell enthusiastically signs the band to a contract after they do an impromptu performance for his guests. All of this miraculously occurs within six hours of their arrival in L.A. (Screw schlepping around town submitting demo tapes; this is the way to become a rock star.) Having achieved overnight fame, our busty, lusty heroines then confront the Dark Side Of Success, finding themselves quickly entangled in various soap opera-ish sub-plots.

    The Suff I Liked: The acting: good, not great, but great acting would only detract from a movie like this. As the three female leads, Dolly Read (Kelly), Cynthia Myers (Casey), and Marcia McBroom (Pet), are, if nothing else, energetic and certainly gorgeous to look at. No, they're not accomplished thespians, but then Russ Meyer chose his actresses more for their cup sizes than their emoting skills. The performances I particularly like are those of John LaZar as flamboyant Ronnie "Z-Man" Barzell, Phyllis Davis as Kelly's kindly Aunt Susan, and Edy Williams as, hilariously, oversexed porn star Ashley St. Ives. The music: some great, late-'60's style rock songs. Does anybody out there know if there is a soundtrack available? Meyer's visual flair: This is one of the most colorful, most visually frenetic films that I have ever seen. Meyer will perhaps be remembered more for his abilities as cinematographer and editor than as director. Almost every frame is jammed with vibrant, sharp color and the whole show zooms along at such a feverish pace that you're left breathless.

    The Stuff I Didn't Like: As I said before, my problem with this movie is the ending. I won't give it away, except to say that it is repellent, gratuitously violent, and so dark and brutal as to be completely out of sync with the gaudy, campy scenes that precede it.

    My suggestion - skip the last 15 minutes or so, and just enjoy the long, riotous bacchanal that comes before.
    Vince-5

    "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls/In a corner of the sky..."

    One of the all-time great cult films, BVD is an energetic, imaginative parody of Valley of the Dolls and other such dippy Hollywood melodramas. Our three lusty, busty heroines are the members of an all-girl pop group. From one trailer: "Dolly Read is Kelly, the singer. Cynthia Myers is Casey, the swinger. Marcia McBroom is Pet, the soul sister." Whoa! Anyway, our trio of sexy supervixens move out to Hollywood, get discovered immediately, and are thrown into a whirlpool of pill addiction, alcoholism, lesbianism, abortions, depression, double crosses, crippling injuries, lots of violence, and lots of sex. All of this is played with a deceptively straight face, with the wild comedy arising from the ludicrousness of the soap-opera situations. One particularly sudsy moment is even accompanied by swelling daytime-TV organ music! There are obvious jokes, which are spirited and very funny, and even some sly references to Valley of the Dolls (a character named Miriam, the Warwick Court Apartments). The ending has to be seen to be believed, and even then....

    The acting is very good (though Dolly Read's natural British and fake American accents are openly battling throughout), with top prizes taken by John LaZar as freaked-out record mogul Z-Man and Edy Williams as voracious porno queen Ashley St. Ives. The women, sporting big hair and thick false eyelashes, are all incredibly beautiful, and Russ Meyer lovingly captures them in neon-bright color. The editing and camerawork are fast-paced and super-stylish, as usual with Meyer. The soundtrack is excellent.

    A groovy, sexy, X-rated look at L.A. back when it was cool!

    Trivia: The reason this X seems so mild is because it was intended for an R! Meyer did prepare a more explicit version, but when this tamer cut was X'd, Fox elected to distribute it instead of the racier print. The video box says NC-17 because Fox has a policy against never releasing an X-rated tape. Of course, an X in 1970 did mean 17 and over, whereas it now means 18 and over. HUGE chasm there!

    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      According to Roger Ebert's audio commentary on the DVD, Russ Meyer was unaware that this film would get an "X" rating. Fox executives had intended for the film to be a hard "R," and Meyer omitted significant amounts of nudity and sex from the final edit. Ebert says that Meyer wanted to add much of the excised footage back into the edit following the MPAA's "X" rating, but there wasn't enough time to do so.
    • Patzer
      Ronnie picks up an extension phone when Casey is in the middle of dialing her friends for help. The phones used are 500 series Western Electric business phones. Because of the way rotary dial phones work, picking up an extension would prevent any phone on the same circuit from being able to dial.
    • Zitate

      Ronnie (Z-Man) Barzell: This is my happening and it freaks me out!

    • Crazy Credits
      Opening disclaimer: "The film you are about to see is not a sequel to Das Tal der Puppen (1967). It is wholly original and bears no relationship to real persons, living or dead. It does, like "Valley of the Dolls" deal with the oft-times nightmare world of show business but in a different time and context."
    • Alternative Versionen
      The British Board of Film Classification have cut the UK video release by 53 seconds. New opening credits were required for this release, as the BBFC would not allow a montage shot of a gun being pushed into the mouth of a sleeping woman, a scene that also reappears in full at the end of the movie (and was also cut). Ironically, the film has been broadcast uncut several times on UK network TV, by Channel 4.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Willie & Phil (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      In The Long Run
      by Bob Stone and Stu Phillips

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ18

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    • What does this have to do with the original "Valley of the Dolls"?

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 11. Dezember 1970 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Deutsch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Más allá del valle de las muñecas
    • Drehorte
      • Century City, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Bridge, and surrounding buildings, used in LA montage)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Twentieth Century Fox
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 900.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 49 Min.(109 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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