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Das neue Land

Originaltitel: Nybyggarna
  • 1972
  • 12
  • 3 Std. 22 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,0/10
5662
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Das neue Land (1972)
A Swedish immigrant family struggle to establish a new life for themselves in the forest of Minnesota in the mid 19th Century.
trailer wiedergeben4:06
1 Video
35 Fotos
EpischZeitraum: DramaDramaWestlich

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA Swedish immigrant family struggle to establish a new life for themselves in 1850s Minnesota.A Swedish immigrant family struggle to establish a new life for themselves in 1850s Minnesota.A Swedish immigrant family struggle to establish a new life for themselves in 1850s Minnesota.

  • Regie
    • Jan Troell
  • Drehbuch
    • Vilhelm Moberg
    • Bengt Forslund
    • Jan Troell
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Max von Sydow
    • Liv Ullmann
    • Eddie Axberg
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,0/10
    5662
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jan Troell
    • Drehbuch
      • Vilhelm Moberg
      • Bengt Forslund
      • Jan Troell
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Max von Sydow
      • Liv Ullmann
      • Eddie Axberg
    • 17Benutzerrezensionen
    • 21Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 9 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 4:06
    Trailer

    Fotos35

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    Topbesetzung30

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    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • Karl Oskar
    Liv Ullmann
    Liv Ullmann
    • Kristina
    Eddie Axberg
    Eddie Axberg
    • Robert
    Pierre Lindstedt
    Pierre Lindstedt
    • Arvid
    Allan Edwall
    Allan Edwall
    • Danjel
    Monica Zetterlund
    Monica Zetterlund
    • Ulrika
    Hans Alfredson
    Hans Alfredson
    • Jonas Petter
    Agneta Prytz
    Agneta Prytz
    • Fina-Kajsa
    Halvar Björk
    Halvar Björk
    • Anders Månsson, hennes son
    Tom C. Fouts
    • Pastor Jackson
    Peter Lindgren
    Peter Lindgren
    • Samuel Nöjd
    Per Oscarsson
    Per Oscarsson
    • Pastor Törner
    Oscar Ljung
    Oscar Ljung
    • Petrus Olausson
    Karin Nordström
    • Judit, hans hustru
    • (as Karin Nordström-Järegård)
    Larry Clementson
    • Mr. Abbot
    Georg Anaya
    • Mario Vallejos
    Ed Carpenter
    • Regementsdoktorn
    Bengt Ottekil
    • Fredrik Mattsson
    • Regie
      • Jan Troell
    • Drehbuch
      • Vilhelm Moberg
      • Bengt Forslund
      • Jan Troell
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen17

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    8lasttimeisaw

    Swedish filmmaker Jan Troell's categorical pièces-de-résistance

    Swedish filmmaker Jan Troell's categorical pièces-de-résistance, a diptych, 7-hours long saga based on his fellow countryman, the literature titan Vilhelm Moberg's THE EMIGRANTS ensemble.

    Divided into THE EMIGRANTS and THE NEW LAND, this 19th-century epic holds a dear look at the travails of an ordinary Swedish household, the Nilsson family, resides in the Småland hinterland, when (mostly natural) adversity mounts against their livelihood, the eldest son Karl Oskar (von Sydow) mulls over the prospect of emigrating to the United States. A proposition deprecated by his wife Kristina (Ullmann) initially, but when poverty and hunger is aggravated by the premature death of one of their brood, she eventually accedes, joining their emigrating pack are Karl Oskar's younger brother Robert (Axberg), his farmhand friend Arvid (Lindstedt), the family of Kristina's uncle Pastor Daniel Andreasson (Edwall, a straight-up hard-hitter, brilliantly bringing about an air of smug virtuosity that treacherously verges on hubris), who is at loggerheads with the supercilious local parish clergy for preaching to the fallen ones (viz. those who are deemed not worthy of Christian gospel), among whom a former prostitute Ulrika (jazz chanteuse Monica Zetterlund), now a reborn woman, also partakes in the trek with her teenage daughter Elin (played by Monica's own daughter Eva-Lena Zetterlund).

    THE EMIGRANTS itself can be bisected into two halves, before and after the family's embarkment for the state of Freedom, during the former, Troell introduces the hardship and inequity (religious parochialism and mistreatment) with a pastoral equanimity (occasionally lard with invigorating drumbeats) and purveys his main characters with sufficient impetus for their longing for a reset button in an idealized country where everyone is (purportedly) being treated equally and fairly, especially for the young Robert, it is the California gold rush beckons him, and supports him against the cavalier abuse he receives on a daily base when working as a farmhand.

    Once their journey kick-starts, a looming nostalgia begins to sweep the cohort, Troell (who is also presiding over the cinematography department) fixes the valediction shot with a subdued solemnity, no goodbyes, tear-infused eyes, lingering looks are deployed, just a long-shot of the elderly parents seeing their children off in front of their house, incorporating the place into their final adieu, and the impact is ineffable.

    Tellingly, THE EMIGRANTS' most accomplished passage is the ten-weeks trans-Atlantic voyage on a wooden brig, and Troell valiantly re-enacts its sordid state of affairs with swingeing maritime verisimilitude when most passengers are fallen victims of sea-sick, life is snuffed within a two-by-four space, by scurvy or even quinsy (a pertinent reference to today's illegal immigrants' ordeal on the sea). Here Liv Ullmann holds court in two magnificent scenes, one is Kristina's altercation with Ulrika, both actress are emotively unsparing, and letting out their prejudice and retorts once for all, which also presciently serves as a catalyst for their eventually best-friends transition; the other is when Kristina, apparently in extremis, exchanges with Karl Oskar their fondness, as if for the last time, by confessing that they are each other's best friends, a superlative affirmation that true love does exist thanks to the two players' most poignant delivery.

    Once the survivors touches the terra firma but incognita, they are still miles away from where they will start life anew, hopping on the train and later a steamer, than on foot, when they finally reach their destination in Minnesota, their first dream is dashed by a boastful liar who never expect his lie will be debunked in his face, and THE EMIGRANTS finishes when Karl Oskar finds their new land under their new identities, American homesteaders.

    Right picking up where its predecessor leaves, THE NEW LAND takes place entirely in the new land, where the Swedish emigrants forming a somewhat enclave, mostly living among themselves, which brings about a problematic issue about the story's sense of locality and Troell's inaction of alleviate this anonymity, if it is not for the random appearances of the indigenous Indians, one can safely surmise that the household is still live in their homeland, with very similar sylvan exuberance and harsh winter-time, and not much foreignness to interact with, in a way, it takes the shine off one of the story's focal points: displacement.

    Yet, what THE NEW LAND excels in, is that oater flashback of Robert, who manages to stay alive just long enough after a futile gold-digging attempt with Arvid, a sounding slap in the face to the wide-eyed daydreamers, the pair is saddled with the same drudgery and hardship (not to mention Robert's potluck is rooked by deception) that ultimate will cost them both their young lives, here Troell launches a more hallucinogenic experiment in accentuating the pair's delirium and exhaustion when wandering in the desert, to admirable effect. Eddie Axberg has weathered convincingly in honing up Robert's tale of woe, and his final resignation with fate effectually brings a lump in one's throat.

    Life goes on, as Karl Oskar's household finally prospers, a God-fearing Kristina turns out to be benighted enough to risk her own life for the sake of procreation, indoctrinated as a wife's sacrosanct duty, even after receiving the doctor's warning that another pregnancy would become her undoing, together with a less disinterested depiction of a wanton slaughter during the Sioux Uprising, by suggestion that it is at the expense of those white homesteaders' hospitality upon which the Indians conducts their retaliation, THE NEW LAND's luster starts to ebb away, notwithstanding a show-stopping Max von Sydow consistently radiates with plebeian bonhomie, sympathy and mettle from stem to stern of the entire roman-fleuve.
    9evanston_dad

    Amazingly Authentic

    "The New Land" finishes the story begun in Jan Troell's "The Emigrants," which was released the year before. It's a longer and bleaker film. "The Emigrants" was harsh, but at least in that film the people making the arduous journey to America had the promise of all that America had to offer (or at least what they thought it had to offer) to get them through the tribulations. But in "The New Land," they've settled into that life, and their new home proves not to be the utopia they dreamed.

    It's astonishing how authentic these films feel, and it's hard to remember while watching them that they were made in the early 1970s. "The New Land" has some really difficult passages to watch, namely one involving the murder of a settler family at the hands of a gang of Native Americans -- including the horrific death of a baby -- and another an extended segment that details the nightmarish fever dream of a journey two of the settlers take to mine for gold in California. This story line started to feel long to me, and in a film that clocks in at nearly three and a half hours I wouldn't have minded this one being left on the cutting room floor. But it doesn't mar the overall brilliance of this film as a stand alone story, or the entire two-film saga.

    And unlike "The Emigrants," which I only found in a dubbed version, "The New Land" is subtitled in English, which makes for a much more pleasant viewing experience.

    "The New Land" was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 1972 Academy Awards, in the same year that "The Emigrants" was nominated in four categories, including Best Picture.

    Grade: A
    8rpabstnm20

    Great but tough to watch

    Great but tough to watch - slow, slow and strange music
    8Jeremy_Urquhart

    Difficult but compelling

    Part 2 of The Emigrants/ The New Land duology (I'm not sure what to collectively call them?) is just as well-made and as emotionally harrowing as the first, but in a different way. The Emigrants naturally dealt with the main characters making a difficult journey from Sweden to the U. S. in the 19th century, with The New Land seeing them settled down and trying to make the most of life in... well, a new land. Naturally, things aren't as great as they hoped it all would be, and the various challenges the characters are put through end up making this a challenging watch for the audience.

    It's not challenging because it's boring or slow, though - more so that it's heavy-going and quite brutal in places. It's also over three hours long, which I know probably already makes it a no-go film for a good many people. It's actually very easy to appreciate all the stuff this does well, because the acting's great, it's visually excellent, and there are some really inspired editing choices in this as well (so it's not surprising to see in the credits that the director and editor are one and the same: Jan Troell).

    These two films end up being about six and a half hours long, and together tell a difficult but engaging story about Swedish/American history, and the plight of an emigrant family plus all the challenges that come with both travel and settling. Not the easiest two-part film in the world to recommend, but it makes for a compelling epic that should deliver for those who find the idea of watching such a film intriguing.
    8gbill-74877

    Authentic tale of life in 1850's Minnesota

    Picking up right where 'The Emigrants' left off, this film tells the story of an Swedish farming family who have staked out a claim and being their life anew in Minnesota. It's done in a highly realistic way, and we really feel the struggle of building a house, clearing the land, facing language difficulties, enduring the cold of winter, not having much money, and the possibly mortal threat of sicknesses. While it's giving us 1850's rural life in an authentic way, without a lot of glitz and a slower pace coming along as a part of that, it somehow does so without ever lagging over its 200+ minute run time, at least for me.

    The story-telling a little more disjoint in this film, giving us bits of life in America almost as if in chapters, some parts of which we see once and then are never mentioned again. One example is the family's neighbors chastising them for their friendship with the former prostitute Ulrika (Monica Zetterlund), who has married a Baptist minister and converted to that faith, which they see as sacrilegious, and failing to note the irony in this view, given their own persecution prior to emigrating. It's a powerful scene, but nothing more comes of it. Similarly, we see a brief interval where Karl-Oscar (Max von Sydow) faces the possibility of going off to fight in America's Civil War after having been in the country for less than ten years, a perspective which was fascinating to me, but after he's rejected because of a limp, we hear nothing more about the distant fighting. Maybe this is like life.

    Director Jan Troell is more daring stylistically during the flashback sequence involving the brother (Eddie Axberg), who goes off with a friend (Pierre Lindstedt) to try to find gold in California. Without spoiling anything, the surreal way he portrays this amplifies their harrowing ordeal, and I liked how the story behind how he returns with so much money is revealed.

    The cast is wonderful, led by von Sydow and Liv Ullmann who have several great scenes. In one of the difficult moments, we see the attitude towards women in the period shown when she's told that getting pregnant again might prove fatal to her given past complications. She feels immense sadness over this because she feels like she wouldn't be a wife if this is true, and in turn, that she wouldn't be able to sleep with her husband if she couldn't risk pregnancy.

    Unlike 'The Emigants', there is acknowledgment that the land these Swedish-Americans are farming was stolen from the Native Americans, but this is a film that is definitely told from a European perspective. Karl-Oscar defends himself, and we sympathize with him - he had no part in any of that, paid the government for the land, and has put in a lot of toil. We don't see any of the atrocities that the white settlers or the government committed, but we see some horrifying things the native Sioux do when backed into a corner and starving. One of the acts done after the killing of an entire white family is so brutally heinous, cruel, and disgusting that it seems to justify the mass hanging of Native Americans which follows. The events seem to be based loosely on the events of the Sioux Uprising in 1862, which led to the mass hanging of 38 Sioux in Minnesota. Still, I give the film credit for directly confronting the moral dilemma, though I struggle, wondering if there is an element here that is in a small way accepting one of America's two original sins. The film successfully strives for honesty through the lens of this family, achieves that, shows us just how hard life was in this period, and lets the viewer then grapple with what it all means. It made me think of the quote from Joyce, History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The movie and its prequel Emigranten (1971) were Oscar nominated on the same year (1972), though in different categories. This is the first and only occurrence of such an event.
    • Patzer
      In one of the first scenes, when Karl Oskar is taking the family to the new settlement, the boom mic is visible in the upper left corner for the entire shot.
    • Zitate

      Karl-Oskar: Kristina, do you remember when we moved here last fall, you said it was almost as pretty as back home in Duvemåla? Maybe we could call our home here Duvemåla. What do you say to that? Or New Duvemåla.

      Kristina: Just think, that I - Duvemåla.

      Karl-Oskar: Yeah.

      Kristina: Then we don't live at Ki-Chi-Saga any more. We live at Duvemåla.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The USA television version, called "The Emigrant Saga" consists of this film plus its prequel, Emigranten (1971), joined and re-edited together in chronological order and dubbed in English.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Stjärnbilder (1996)

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    FAQ

    • How long is The New Land?
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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 19. März 1976 (Ostdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Schweden
    • Sprachen
      • Schwedisch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Die Neubürger
    • Drehorte
      • Stonefield Village, Cassville, Wisconsin, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Svensk Filmindustri (SF)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      3 Stunden 22 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.66 : 1

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