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Grenzpunkt Null

Originaltitel: Vanishing Point
  • 1971
  • 18
  • 1 Std. 39 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
31.821
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Grenzpunkt Null (1971)
Official Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben2:21
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Aktion im AutoAutoreiseSchwarze KomödieActionKriminalitätThriller

In den 1970er Jahren liefert der Autozulieferer Kowalski Hot Rods in Rekordzeit, gerät aber immer wieder in Schwierigkeiten mit den Autobahnpolizei.In den 1970er Jahren liefert der Autozulieferer Kowalski Hot Rods in Rekordzeit, gerät aber immer wieder in Schwierigkeiten mit den Autobahnpolizei.In den 1970er Jahren liefert der Autozulieferer Kowalski Hot Rods in Rekordzeit, gerät aber immer wieder in Schwierigkeiten mit den Autobahnpolizei.

  • Regie
    • Richard C. Sarafian
  • Drehbuch
    • Guillermo Cabrera Infante
    • Malcolm Hart
    • Barry Hall
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Barry Newman
    • Cleavon Little
    • Charlotte Rampling
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    31.821
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Richard C. Sarafian
    • Drehbuch
      • Guillermo Cabrera Infante
      • Malcolm Hart
      • Barry Hall
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Barry Newman
      • Cleavon Little
      • Charlotte Rampling
    • 214Benutzerrezensionen
    • 112Kritische Rezensionen
    • 61Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Official Trailer

    Fotos146

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    Topbesetzung36

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    Barry Newman
    Barry Newman
    • Kowalski
    Cleavon Little
    Cleavon Little
    • Super Soul
    Charlotte Rampling
    Charlotte Rampling
    • Hitch-Hiker
    • (Gelöschte Szenen)
    Dean Jagger
    Dean Jagger
    • Prospector
    Victoria Medlin
    Victoria Medlin
    • Vera Thornton
    Paul Koslo
    Paul Koslo
    • Deputy Charlie Scott
    Robert Donner
    Robert Donner
    • Deputy Collins
    • (as Bob Donner)
    Timothy Scott
    Timothy Scott
    • Angel
    Gilda Texter
    • Nude Rider
    Anthony James
    Anthony James
    • First Male Hitchhiker
    Arthur Malet
    Arthur Malet
    • Second Male Hitchhiker
    Karl Swenson
    Karl Swenson
    • Sandy McKeese - Clerk at Delivery Agency
    Severn Darden
    Severn Darden
    • J. Hovah
    Delaney & Bonnie & Friends
    • J. Hovah's Singers
    Lee Weaver
    Lee Weaver
    • Jake
    Cherie Foster
    • First Girl
    Valerie Kairys
    Valerie Kairys
    • Second Girl
    Tom Reese
    Tom Reese
    • Sheriff
    • Regie
      • Richard C. Sarafian
    • Drehbuch
      • Guillermo Cabrera Infante
      • Malcolm Hart
      • Barry Hall
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen214

    7,231.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    pullgees

    Soul challenger

    The best road movie ever made. To appreciate it you have got to try and see it from the culture of that era. It is totally anti establishment as was the mood of half of America. So the police are all idiots, the 'good ol boys' are either violent rednecks or passive disapproving onlookers. Kowalski is going to give those mid west conservatives something they won't forget, he's going to shake things up for a day or two. Kowalski is simply the symbol of the many disenfranchised at the time. The story starts at the end. We hear a boring stifling radio news item on the price of grain. We see dreary looking bystanders who need to be turned on. Then Super Soul takes over the airwaves with his wild DJ antics and hippy music trying to jolt these people out of their fixed ways. The old and the new are clashing. This sets the mood we know from then it is rebellious. Other aspects the stunts the music the characters have been well covered below so there is no need to say more on that. Some have said that there is no point to this story or Kowalski's motives and have interpreted the title meaning that. But all a vanishing point is an artist name for the phenomena of perspective where two parallel lines seemingly meet and in the long straight roads of the journey we see plenty of vanishing points.
    7tom-darwin

    Can you ever build enough speed on the road to escape your past & your pain?

    "Vanishing Point" asks the question and, like other films of this kind before "Smokey & the Bandit" brought the genre to an end, lets us ponder the answer on our own. Other than that, there's no point to this film except to demonstrate that the Challenger is one of the best-looking muscle/sports cars ever made. Get too far into this movie & you'll want to sell your children to have one. Kowalski is a '70s knight-errant, or a Greek mythological hero, just as you please. He rides his Hemi-powered steed on a quest to San Francisco, not for a "what," or a "why," or even for a lady fair, but only for "how fast." Does he seek redemption? Escape? Self-forgiveness? To stick it to the Man? Who cares? Knavish cops close in on him, lotus-eaters like Hovah (Darden) shun him, sirens (especially the stark-naked Texter, who would've stopped Burt Reynolds's Bandit faster than Sally Field ever did) want him to dally. Sharp-featured, Western character actor Anthony James has a hilarious, uncharacteristic turn as a gay hitchhiker. Humble, noble souls come forth to guide Kowalski like angels, including a scruffy snake-hunter (Jagger), chopper jockey & drug dealer Angel (Scott), and the blind deejay Super Soul (Little, who should've been a contender for the part of Howard Beal in "Network"). The Man's attempts to explain Kowalski are annoying distractions, so hit the "mute" button when you see scenes of cops in offices. And stop wondering why Kowalski, on his quest for speed, is always being overtaken & passed by other vehicles. Just put your brain in neutral, put your popcorn where it's handy, and buckle up.
    tedg

    Eyes chasing Eyes

    Gosh, I had forgotten how powerful this is.

    Seeing it again is a real lesson on how certain cinematic language, if presented purely, transcends. And for a US-made movie, it is pretty pure.

    If you do not know it, the primary narrative is essentially no narrative: a muscle car speeding across the desert chased by police, initially for speeding and ultimately just to exert power. This fellow is Kowalski, a name imported from a landmark film. He simply drives. It is his life now. We see flashbacks. Find he was a Medal of Honor winner in Vietnam, a star racer and then a cop. There's a backstory about his being a good cop and turning in some rotten apples, so by degrees we come to understand the moral landscape.

    There is only one other character, a blind black disk jockey who is listened to by apparently everyone. Guided by his eavesdropping on police radio, and some psychic ability.

    This was after "Easy Rider" and instead of bold men moving into a life, we have life chasing an honest man. Same ethic, could even have been the same man. But he knows himself. He knows he is a cinematic creature, someone to be observed and dreamed about. He knows he carries his world with him. Always borrowed.

    You can see Malick here, the notion that the character sees us seeing him, that he knows he is fictional and knows we think him not. You can trace it to the female version in "Thelma and Louise," where they have their end only because they know someone will watch. Its not like "Cool Hand Luke," or "Bonnie and Clyde" at all where the man decides. That comes from the Hollywood western.

    Its derived from the "Breathless" tradition.

    A good third of this film is spent on the "audience," the rural townspeople. These parts are filmed in a documentary style, with — it seems — real people who have come to watch the filming, having heard on the radio from a borrowed soul. They look dumb and bored, clearly with nothing better to do than watch, just like us.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    10AdamKey

    A Dirge For A Dying America

    Richard Sarafian's 1971 film "Vanishing Point" is, for starters, a fascinating study of those persons anthropologists sometimes term "marginal men"--individuals caught between two powerful and competing cultures, sharing some important aspects of both but not a true part of either, and, as such, remain tragically confined to an often-painful existential loneliness. Inhabiting a sort of twilight zone between "here" and "there," a sort of peculiar purgatory, these restless specters cannot find any peace or place, so they instead instinctively press madly on to some obscure and unknown destination, the relentless journey itself being the only reason and justification.

    Disc jockey Super Soul (Cleavon Little) and delivery driver Kowalski (Barry Newman) are two of these specters, marginal but decent, intelligent men who can't or won't live in burgeoning competing cultures which in reality have offered them very little of worth or substance, despite their own personal sacrifices. Kowalski himself had tried to "fit in" with the Establishment as a soldier and police officer and later, attempted to do the same with the blossoming 1960s counterculture, but soon disappointingly found that they both were ridden with their own various forms of dishonesty and insincerity. Personal honor, self-reliance and genuine respect--Kowalski's stock in trade--were tragically valued very little by either, despite each one's shrill and haughty claims to the contrary.

    Moreover, it's no accident Newman's character has a Polish surname; the Poles throughout their history have created a very rich and unique Slavic culture largely based upon just such a "marginality"--being geographically jammed between powerful historic enemies, Germany and Russia, and never being able to fully identify with either one, at often great cost to themselves. It's also no accident Little's character is blind and black, the only one of his kind in a small, all-Caucasian western desert town--his sightlessness enhancing his persuasiveness and his ability to read Kowalski's mind, the radio microphone his voice, his race being the focus of long simmering and later suddenly explosive disdain--all of the characteristics of a far-seeing prophet unjustly (but typically) dishonored in his own land.

    The desert environment also plays a key role in cementing the personal relationship between and respective fates of these two men--to paraphrase British novelist J.G. Ballard, prophets throughout our history have emerged from deserts of some sort since deserts have, in a sense, exhausted their own futures (like Kowalski himself had already done) and thus are free of the concepts of time and existence as we have conventionally known them (as Super Soul instinctively knew, thus creating his own psychic link to the doomed driver.) Everything is somehow possible, and yet, somehow nothing is.

    Finally, VP is also a "fin de siecle" story, a unique requiem for a quickly dying age- a now all-but-disappeared one of truly open roads, endless speed for the joy of speed's sake, of big, solid no-nonsense muscle cars, of taking radical chances, of living on the edge in a colorful world of endless possibility, seasoned with a large number and wide variety of all sorts of unusual characters, all of which had long made the USA a wonderful place--and sadly is no longer, having been supplanted by today's swarms of sadistic, military-weaponed cop-thugs, obsessive and intrusive safety freaks, soulless toll plazas, smug yuppie SUV drivers, tedious carbon-copy latte towns, and a childish craving for perfect, high-fuel-efficiency safety and security.

    The just-issued DVD contains both the US and UK releases of the film; the UK release, I believe, is a much more satisfying film, as it has the original scenes deleted from the US version. As an aside, Super Soul's radio station call letters, KOW, are in fact the ones for a country & western station in San Diego.
    10Apollyon_Crash

    Look back on your life torn asunder...then throw it into third gear and floor it.

    Barry Newman is "Kowalski", an enigmatic figure who has tried everything in his life from stock car racing to the military, and failed at every one of his endeavors. Working as an auto delivery man, he gets an order to transport a 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T to San Francisco, and makes a bet with a few friends that it can be done in an impossibly short time. After loading up on "ups" and throttling the car westward, he is soon pursued vigorously by the police and embraced by the public as something of a hero. During a time when national speed limits were all controversy, this film provides a compelling argument against them: A fast car in the hands of a capable driver is not dangerous. Even the police, so caught up in their own system, don't realize that they are the only ones causing accidents and endangering the public while blindly trying to keep up with and capture Kowalski.

    While the film sounds at first to be a simple action film, it's really much more than that. Kowalksi's past is revealed little by little through flashbacks, making the film something of a character study. Kowalski's trip becomes a road trip of existentialism as he runs across various strange characters: Solitary hippies, gay bandits, a boogie-woogie snake handling Christian cult, and the blind soul station DJ (brilliantly played by Cleavon Little) who is attempting to guide him on his journey from within the car's radio.

    Topping it off is a great soundtrack, breathtaking cinematography and direction, and automotive action that has seen no equal. This film manages to be both compelling and exciting. Just watch it already.

    10/10

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    • Wissenswertes
      In an interview, actor Paul Koslo spoke about legendary stunt driver Cary Loftin; "One night coming home from location, Cary was driving one of the Challengers back to the hotel, and he passed some New Mexico state troopers going 145 miles an hour! [laughs] He had four or five cop cars behind him with their lights on, but they couldn't catch up because they could only go about 125! So he drove into this little town and started to shut the car down. He pulled into a gas station, and I swear to God, he did a 360 in between the pumps and put the rear of the car - the gas tank - right in front of the super pump! He got out of the car like nothing happened, and the troopers busted his ass right there! [laughs] Oh, you should've seen those cops! They were fuming! They took him in, and the producer had to explain to them that Cary had actually been testing the car - that he did a lot of these spinouts because he'd been having trouble with the car! [laughs] I mean, you do have to test the cars, but you don't do it while you're driving home!"
    • Patzer
      The 19-inch racks in Super Soul's radio station with large tape reels (in one scene seen fast moving) are not audio equipment. These tape drives were used in computer systems in the 1970s to store data on tape.
    • Zitate

      Super Soul: This radio station was named Kowalski, in honour of the last American hero to whom speed means freedom of the soul. The question is not when's he gonna stop, but who is gonna stop him.

    • Crazy Credits
      The Fox logo is shown without the fanfare making it one of the first times this has happened.
    • Alternative Versionen
      When first released in Brazil, the movie had some scenes cut, reducing the running time to 99 minutes.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Gone with the Wind: The Remarkable Rise and Tragic Fall of Lynyrd Skynyrd (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      You Got to Believe
      Composed by Delaney Bramlett

      Sung by Delaney & Bonnie & Friends

      (Courtesy of Atlantic Records)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 14. Mai 1971 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Fluchtpunkt San Francisco
    • Drehorte
      • Goldfield Hotel, Goldfield, Nevada, USA(KOW radio station)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Cupid Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 1.585.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 12.442.673 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 12.443.722 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 39 Min.(99 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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