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Das Gespenst der Freiheit

Originaltitel: Le fantôme de la liberté
  • 1974
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 43 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,7/10
18.138
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Luis Buñuel in Das Gespenst der Freiheit (1974)
SatireSchwarze KomödieKomödie

Eine Serie von surrealen Sequenzen, die Moral und Gesellschaft in einem Strom von Bewusstseinsstil kritisieren.Eine Serie von surrealen Sequenzen, die Moral und Gesellschaft in einem Strom von Bewusstseinsstil kritisieren.Eine Serie von surrealen Sequenzen, die Moral und Gesellschaft in einem Strom von Bewusstseinsstil kritisieren.

  • Regie
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Drehbuch
    • Luis Buñuel
    • Jean-Claude Carrière
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jean-Claude Brialy
    • Adolfo Celi
    • Michel Piccoli
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,7/10
    18.138
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Drehbuch
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jean-Claude Brialy
      • Adolfo Celi
      • Michel Piccoli
    • 322Benutzerrezensionen
    • 72Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 wins total

    Fotos44

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    Topbesetzung68

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    Jean-Claude Brialy
    Jean-Claude Brialy
    • Foucauld…
    Adolfo Celi
    Adolfo Celi
    • Le docteur de Legendre…
    Michel Piccoli
    Michel Piccoli
    • Le second préfet de police…
    Monica Vitti
    Monica Vitti
    • Mme Foucaud…
    Adriana Asti
    Adriana Asti
    • Estella La dame en noir et Marguerite Richepin la soeur du premier préfet…
    Julien Bertheau
    Julien Bertheau
    • Richepin premier préfet de police…
    Paul Frankeur
    Paul Frankeur
    • L'aubergiste…
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • Jean Bermans
    Pierre Maguelon
    Pierre Maguelon
    • Gérard, le gendarme…
    François Maistre
    François Maistre
    • Le professeur des gendarmes…
    Hélène Perdrière
    • La vieille tante…
    Claude Piéplu
    Claude Piéplu
    • Le commissaire de police…
    Jean Rochefort
    Jean Rochefort
    • Legendre…
    Bernard Verley
    Bernard Verley
    • Le capitaine des dragons
    Milena Vukotic
    Milena Vukotic
    • L'infirmière
    • (as Miléna Vukotic)
    • …
    Jenny Astruc
    • La femme du professeur
    Pascale Audret
    Pascale Audret
    • Mme Legendre
    Ellen Bahl
    • Françoise, la nurse des Legendre
    • Regie
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Drehbuch
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen322

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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9dbdumonteil

    Liberty is a concept by which we measure our laws..

    Although Bunuel was to make one more film,"cet obscur objet du désir" ,"phantom of liberty" would remain his testament,his last sigh ,to mention the title of his memoirs.

    The key to the movie is the segment dealing with the naughty gendarmes,the sociology teacher and Margaret Mead's books.Law must not be taken for granted,it depends on where and when you live.Something which would seem unbearable to us is nothing but natural to other human beings.The whole movie walks this fine line,being built around this very concept.It is Bunuel's most accessible movie and it's completely mad,which is fine with me.Its construction is not unlike Max Ophuls's "la ronde" (1950) as a new character provides the connection between the segments.It's not really free-form ,in the sense of the nouvelle vague ,nothing Godardesque here and anyway,Bunuel possessed something Jean-Luc will never have:humor.And the screenplay displays care and respect for the audience.One should point out Jean-Claude Carrière's importance in Bunuel's last works in France.

    In "discreet charm of the bourgeoisie" ,humor which was latent in the former works (the dogs in "Viridiana" ;the pineapple in "Nazarin" ) came to the fore."Phantom" is probably not as strong as the previous work:it's sometimes uneven and some segments (the old aunt and her nephew)drag on.But most of the times,it's a delight.Bunuel's usual targets ,the Church and the Army are both given a rough ride .But social conventions ,"normality" are too.

    A bevy of great actors take us to a magical mystery tour (Bunuel's regret was that too many movies lack mystery) Here he focused on the secret of the passage of the night hours ,wherever the action takes place ,in Brialy's and Vitti's bedroom or the inn where the guests are weird to say the least (the scenes in the inn recall those of "la voie lactée,1969).And the ostrich in the couple's room ,we find it back at the zoo,for the finale,when repression rises.When we bury our head in the sand ,French people call it "ostrish politics"! Bunuel was a great man.Everything he did is crying to be watched.When the movie was released,probably upset by the huge commercial success ,some critics called it "Bunuel' s holiday homework".Time proved them wrong.In 2005,"phantom" is solid as a rock.
    8claudio_carvalho

    A Delicious Surrealistic Satire to the Moral and Costumes of the Society, to the Family and to the Church

    Through many episodes with some linking points since 1808 in Toledo (Spain) to the present days in France, Bunuel presents a delicious surrealistic satire to the moral and costumes of the hypocrite society, to the family values and to the church. I liked very much some parts, like, for example, the hypocrisy of the priests in a hotel, praying for the health of the father of a guest in a moment, and drinking and playing cards like gangsters in the next moment. The bourgeoisie family sat on toilets in the dining room and producing crap while having a conversation is fantastic, reflecting his opinion about the dominating class. The little girl that "vanished" for her parents is a great critics to the behavior of most families. The hypocrisy of the justice, reflected in the segment of the sniper. It is amazing the interpretations each segment offers to the viewer through the symbolism of Bunuel. However, this movie is recommend for very specific audiences. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "O Fantasma da Liberdade" ("The Phantom of the Liberty")
    10hasosch

    The Dissolution of Form and Function

    Luis Bunuel's "Le Phantôme de la liberté" is a movie whose episodes are only loosely connected, because the watcher is a part of the society whose liberty and freedom is a phantom. Moreover, it is man who watches this movie that also creates the story – not on the screen, of course, but in her or his mind. This is a movie that does never go out of your mind.

    The clue scene is in the episode where Margaret Mead's books are mentioned. And in fact, since this movie deals with liberty and with persons of very different cultural, religious and aesthetic backgrounds, it is a sociological movie. It was Mead who gave the direction to the late cybernetician Heinz von Foerster's (1911-2002) work: Second-order cybernetics. It is called "second order" because this theory has an environment in which subject and object have a space of liberty. Only in such an environment-based logic it is possible to reflect to oneself. And this is exactly what happened in Bunel's core-scene: The teacher speaks to his students that laws have exceptions because they are depending on man, and man is depending on evolution. Therefore, there can be no laws at all, because they also stay and fall with evolution. And if they are no laws at all, then they are no causal relations. And if there are no causal relations, then form and function vanish, exactly like in Bunuel's movie. But the most important point is that this conclusion is reflected in the movie itself. The teacher who makes this self-reflection moreover has much in common with Bunuel, so for example, when he criticizes the standard level of human life in Spain – as Bunuel did in an interview.

    Another interesting point is that the physician's name is Dr. Pasolini. Bunuel's movie was released in 1974, thus just at the time when Pier Paolo Pasolini started to film his last work "Salo", in which (amongst many other marvelous events) there is the famous or infamous scene where people are forced to eat faeces. But faeces play an important role in Bunuel's "Phantom of Liberty" (so the English title of this movie), too: The teacher explains his friends how many kilograms of faeces a human produces daily, and since there are so and so many billions of people on this world, this makes so and so many tons of faeces per year. Then, the teacher has lunch in the restroom (one of the most famous scenes of this movie). And finally, in his regular bar, the teacher explains the girl who resembles to his sister that this sister died because her intestines exploded. This three-times occurrence of faeces, the mentioning of Pasolini and the insight that form and function must abolish only because of human evolution leads the critical watcher to a conclusion about the sociology of human life that is not too far away form that of Pasolini: All mankind is able to produce is faeces.

    Although Bunuel made one more movie ("Cet obscur object du désir", in 1977), he considered the "Pantom of Libery" his testament. Pasolini's testament was the "Salo". Bunuel still lived nine more years after his "Phantom", Pasolini was killed shortly after the postproduction of "Salo". Pasolini was radical and consistent, Bunuel still had kept his sense of humor (the "Phantom" ranges under "comedy", at least officially). Perhaps in the end, it was the humor that let Bunuel alive, while its absence killed Pasolini. Or was Bunuel's humor gallows humor? He drank himself to death.
    9braugen

    Buñuel continues to impress with this surrealistic, violent comedy

    The master of surrealistic cinema, Luis Buñuel, changed his approach to the bourgeoisie after "Tristana", and his last three films are all comic and prevail through a mixture of pure surrealism, extreme irony and the one consistent theme of Buñuel's auteurship- hatred of the ruling classes.

    "Le Fantôme de la Liberté" is perhaps Buñuel's least accessible work since his first two films, "Un Chien Andalou" and "L' Age d' Or". It is a thematic continuation of "Le Charme Discret de la Bourgeoisie", where the seven protagonists just couldn't finish, or even start, a meal. This is a strong metaphor for Buñuel's view that the bourgeoisie is a dying class, and that not even a violent revolution is needed to remove the bourgeoisie from power and wealth. They are perfectly capable of doing so themselves, through their indulgence in pathetic etiquette and decaying sense of morality. "Le Fantôme" is not funnier than "Le Charme", but it is harder to understand, and this is exactly what Buñuel and Carrière wanted after the success of "Le Charme" at the previous Academy Awards.

    In "Le Fantôme", not even the characters are consistent throughout the film. This film is like a relay, where one member of the ruling class passes the stick to the next, and never comes back to the vision of the audience. They just leave, like Buñuel wanted them to, perhaps, but in this film is an important factor because it confirms Buñuel's non-human view of the people of this class. His was a collective hatred, and this film reflects his collective view of the bourgeoisie. The film contains absurd, surreal incidents, like priests playing cards while smoking and drinking, parents reacting to postcards of famous buildings given their daughter by a stranger as they were obscene and a writer killing tens of people from his sniping-position at the roof of a building. The writer is found not guilty, and the continuing mix-up of characters, two actors competing for one role makes for a very confusing narrative. Or maybe the "story" is just a mockery of traditional storytelling in film. Resnais and Robbe-Grillet made "Last Year in Marienbad" just to prove that telling stories is a bourgeois thing and not necessary for modernist or revolutionary cinema.

    This film is actually based on a painting by Francisco José de Goya called "El Tres de Mayo" (The three in Mayo), and "Le Fantôme" starts with a short episode of how Buñuel depicts the incidents during the Napoleon Wars. But it's the theme of Goya's painting that Buñuel is concerned with, and this film is more than a mockery of the bourgeoisie, it is also an attack on communist doctrine which all over the world only seems to take from the people what is was supposed to give to the people: Freedom, and also an attack on leftist defeatism. The glorification of the defeat is perhaps the modern Left's biggest problem, which only leads to a move away from power. "Down with freedom!", Buñuel's revolutionaries shout- and the firing squads start firing at the dying revolutionaries.
    10surreal24b

    Surrealism at its best

    One of Buñuel's greatest films. Scene after scene arguments are used as beautiful excuses to subvert reality and attack established and hypocritical institutions with acute humor and surrealist means. If you have a taste for surrealism and absurd humor (i.e. Monty Python, Marx Bros., etc.) this movie cannot be recommended enough.

    One small correction: the sniper is not sentenced to death but to capital punishment which results in something altogether different from death (and far more sarcastic).

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The title is a reference to "The Communist Manifesto," which in English begins: "A spectre is stalking Europe, the spectre of Communism." The French translation known to Buñuel translated "spectre" as "fantôme." So, the title can be seen as a dig at the "Bourgeois" mentality which fears freedom, and also a sideswipe at the rather straightjacketed Communist parties of the time.
    • Zitate

      Sophie: Mommy, I'm very hungry!

      L'hôtesse à la réception mondaine: Sophie, it's impolite to use those words at the table!

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into The Clock (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Carnaval Op. 9 No. 12 Chopin
      Written by Robert Schumann

      Played on the piano by the sister of the police commissioner

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 14. Februar 1975 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Frankreich
      • Italien
    • Sprachen
      • Latein
      • Spanisch
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Phantom of Liberty
    • Drehorte
      • Tour Montparnasse - 33, avenue Maine, Paris 15, Paris, Frankreich(Sniper shooting scene)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Greenwich Film Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 6.172 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 6.172 $
      • 10. Nov. 2002
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 6.749 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 43 Min.(103 min)
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.66 : 1

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