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Der Tag der Heuschrecke

Originaltitel: The Day of the Locust
  • 1975
  • 16
  • 2 Std. 24 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
6808
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Der Tag der Heuschrecke (1975)
An art director in the 1930s falls in love and attempts to make a young woman an actress despite Hollywood who wants nothing to do with her because of her problems with an estranged man and her alcoholic father.
trailer wiedergeben3:31
1 Video
99+ Fotos
DramaThriller

Ein Art Director in den 1930er Jahren verliebt sich und versucht, aus einer jungen Frau trotz Hollywoods, die wegen ihrer Probleme nichts mit ihr zu tun haben will, eine Schauspielerin zu ma... Alles lesenEin Art Director in den 1930er Jahren verliebt sich und versucht, aus einer jungen Frau trotz Hollywoods, die wegen ihrer Probleme nichts mit ihr zu tun haben will, eine Schauspielerin zu machen.Ein Art Director in den 1930er Jahren verliebt sich und versucht, aus einer jungen Frau trotz Hollywoods, die wegen ihrer Probleme nichts mit ihr zu tun haben will, eine Schauspielerin zu machen.

  • Regie
    • John Schlesinger
  • Drehbuch
    • Nathanael West
    • Waldo Salt
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Donald Sutherland
    • Karen Black
    • Burgess Meredith
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    6808
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Schlesinger
    • Drehbuch
      • Nathanael West
      • Waldo Salt
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Donald Sutherland
      • Karen Black
      • Burgess Meredith
    • 100Benutzerrezensionen
    • 44Kritische Rezensionen
    • 61Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 2 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:31
    Official Trailer

    Fotos136

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    Topbesetzung77

    Ändern
    Donald Sutherland
    Donald Sutherland
    • Homer
    Karen Black
    Karen Black
    • Faye
    Burgess Meredith
    Burgess Meredith
    • Harry
    William Atherton
    William Atherton
    • Tod
    Geraldine Page
    Geraldine Page
    • Big Sister
    Richard Dysart
    Richard Dysart
    • Claude Estee
    • (as Richard A. Dysart)
    Bo Hopkins
    Bo Hopkins
    • Earle Shoop
    Pepe Serna
    Pepe Serna
    • Miguel
    Lelia Goldoni
    Lelia Goldoni
    • Mary Dove
    Billy Barty
    Billy Barty
    • Abe
    Jackie Earle Haley
    Jackie Earle Haley
    • Adore
    • (as Jackie Haley)
    Gloria LeRoy
    Gloria LeRoy
    • Mrs. Loomis
    • (as Gloria Le Roy)
    Jane Hoffman
    • Mrs. Odlesh
    Norman Leavitt
    Norman Leavitt
    • Mr. Odlesh
    • (as Norm Leavitt)
    Madge Kennedy
    Madge Kennedy
    • Mrs. Johnson
    Ina Gould
    • Lee Sister
    Florence Lake
    Florence Lake
    • Lee Sister
    Margaret Willey
    • Gingo
    • Regie
      • John Schlesinger
    • Drehbuch
      • Nathanael West
      • Waldo Salt
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen100

    6,96.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    JonB-2

    One of the most haunting films of all time

    I don't quite understand the comments from the viewers who found this film boring. I've been lucky enough to see it on the big screen several times at revival houses, and each time I was blown away. Day of the Locust is a dark, compelling, amusing, bitter epic that's really more about America itself as filtered through the lens of Hollywood at its first creative height, in the 1930s.

    What makes the movie, beyond the writing and direction, is its cast, and many of the supporting actors here create indelible characters. Why Karen Black didn't remain a superstar after this decade is a mystery, especially after this film -- in which she proves that she could act the hell out of a role. And how can you not like a film in which Billy Barty plays a foul-mouthed alcoholic (the first character we meet in the book), Burgess Meredith is a hapless door-to-door salesman, Natalie "Lovey" Shafer is the madam of a high-class whorehouse in San Bernardino, and Donald Sutherland is the repressed Homer ("No Relation") Simpson, an accountant who's so alienated from his own feelings that he's reduced to howling in despair in his own garden. And, in fact, Sutherland's character is involved in one of the film's most harrowing moments, which features a young Jackie Earle Haley as a promising child star of indeterminate gender but infinite obnoxiousness.

    Anyway, if you have a chance to catch this film on the big screen, by all means do so, and be sure to add the DVD to your collection -- although, since we're coming up on the 30th anniversary, it's just possible that Paramount Home Video might decide to give it the deluxe treatment it deserves. Frankenheimer, et al, manage to take a brilliant novella by Nathaniel West and turn it into an amazing piece of cinema that will stick with you long after the lights go up. And, as an added bonus, you can just enjoy it as a great story, or delve deeply into the symbolism. This is the kind of film that works both ways, and one that you cannot miss if you consider yourself any kind of film fan at all, at all.
    8bkoganbing

    A Plague Descends

    It took over 35 years and the collapse of the big studio system before anyone in Hollywood, in this case Paramount, brought Nathanael West's novel The Day Of The Locust to the big screen. That climax at a Hollywood premiere is certainly not something the studios would want to show the public as a typical event.

    The book is based on West's experiences while writing B pictures in Hollywood during the Thirties and some of the characters he knew. His main protagonist is William Atherton, an aspiring artist who is making a living doing set designs. That's one competitive business and he's got to go over his immediate supervisor John Hillerman's head to get his work noticed by producer Richard Dysart. Like the rest of West's characters, he's sacrificed pride a long time ago. It's his eyes that we see the other characters through.

    But he's a paragon of virtue compared to starlet Karen Black who will do anything and anybody to advance her career. Atherton would love to get something going with her, but he's mindful of how amoral she's become. Her only real attachment is to her father, an ex-vaudevillian and now door to door salesman, Burgess Meredith. Even trying to do his shtick with sales doesn't gain him clients.

    But the saddest one in the lot and the fellow with the best performance is Donald Sutherland who is an outsider to the film people, a businessman named Homer Simpson who Black uses and abuses. Sutherland's performance is not too different from the hapless cartoon character. Imagine the cartoon Homer Simpson dealing with real life heartbreak and you've got Sutherland's character. The line between tragedy and comedy can be a very thin one.

    Geraldine Page has a brief role as an Aimee Semple McPherson like evangelist, shamelessly bilking the Depression's downtrodden. She's great in the part as is Jackie Earle Haley, a really rotten child star of whom I'd love to know who West's model was.

    The Day Of The Locust was directed by John Schlesinger who got an Oscar for The Midnight Cowboy. Like that film, The Day Of The Locust deals with some fringe people just trying to get by. Burgess Meredith got an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor and the film also got a nomination for Costume Design.

    Before Newton Minow referred to television as a vast wasteland. I think that's what Nathanael West had in mind in writing about his experiences in the movie capital. I'd recommend seeing the film to see how well Schlesinger put West's vision across.
    Muffy-5

    "Mulholland Drive" with more blood.

    I first saw "Day of the Locust" because I thought Karen Black was keen. I liked the film, but I can't say I understood its point at the time. What's with the faceless people, Sutherland's hands, and the angry dwarf? Sounds like David Lynch to me, especially in light of "Mulholland Drive" and its scathing, unsympathetic view of Hollywood (it even has a cowboy!)

    I finally got around to reading the Nathanael West novel -- which is absolutely brilliant -- and decided to watch the film again. And I need to say that, as much as I still appreciate and enjoy the movie, it really missed the boat, trying to cram bits and pieces of ideas from the novel (the strange, artificial relationship between Faye and her father, the barely-restrained violence of those who "come to Hollywood to die," the anachronistic and cold facade of Hollywood and the people in charge of it), meanwhile stuffing in some 70's ideas, reflecting back on the beginnings of WWII (which wasn't an issue in the book at all), and -- strangely enough -- adding warmth and humanity to characters whose sole characteristic (in the novel) was that they had NO warmth or humanity whatsoever.

    And that's the weird thing about this movie. I remember, when I first saw it, I was amazed at how unlikeable all the characters were. After reading the book, however, I can say that the characters in the movie are FAR TOO likeable to support any of the book's themes. This is most notable when it comes to Faye's little breakdowns, letting the viewer know that she's really a good person who wants to be loved, turning her into a VICTIM of the star system. But the point of the book -- as I gathered, anyway -- was that these people aren't victims at all. They're greedy people who victimize each-other, and usually in sloppy, stupid ways ("Jeepers, Creepers!") Faye isn't capable of an unaffected tender moment, all she can do is pretend. The same goes for her father: even his moments of genuine sickness and pain are filtered through his never-ending vaudeville routine.

    Homer Simpson, as well, is portrayed (in the film) as a sort of unfortunate lump, and a bible-thumper to boot, taken advantage of by Faye. But that destroys one of the great levels of nastiness in the novel: Homer is just as much as an opportunist as Faye, and he deserves everything he gets. Why is he being so generous, letting her stay with him and hold cock-fights in his garage? Because he's a pathetic, incapable human being who barely has a human feature to him: he's just a collection of nervous ticks. He lusts after her, and he seems to delight in his thwarted lust. He's got less going for him than that lizard on the cactus, eating flies.

    The film suffers from an attempt to make the characters likeable, almost without exception. The only person who escapes this "Hollywood-ization" of the book is Adore, the horrible child star whose fate nobody who has seen the movie (or read the book) will ever forget. Jeez!

    If you find yourself watching this movie and "just not getting it," do yourself a favour and read the book. It won't make the movie any clearer, but you can at least view the movie as a clear-cut example of the sort of thing the book was pointing out and railing against, way back in 1939 when this idea was still a novel one: Hollywood films are manipulative and full of fakery, and so are humans in general, and people in general are also ghoulish and horrible, and no amount of eyelash-fluttering or smooth tango-dancing will disguise that. You might be the owner of a big studio and have an inflatable dead horse in your pool, but you still can't relate to your wife, and the only thing left in your life is pathetic thrill-seeking (cock-fights, cheesy stag flicks).

    (Incidentally, I'm amazed at how many quirky things ended up in the screenplay that WEREN'T part of the book! Kudos to the scriptwriter for that at least!)
    8MOscarbradley

    Much maligned but really rather outstanding

    Critically much maligned but really rather an outstanding screen adaptation of Nathanael West's 'difficult' novel about Hollywood in the 1930's and based on West's own experiences there as a 'hack' writer. The British director John Schlesinger helmed the picture, bringing much the same jaundiced eye to bear on proceedings as he did in "Midnight Cowboy". Waldo Salt wrote the excellent script and the outstanding cast included Karen Black as the wannabe actress trying to make it big in the movies, Burgess Meredith as her drunken father, William Atherton as the young art director in love with her and Donald Sutherland as the sad and lonely Homer Simpson that Black all but destroys and whose presence instigates the films tragic ending. The great Conrad Hall photographed the picture and the monstrous child is Jackie Earle Haley.
    ptb-8

    On dangerous ground

    If you were lucky enough to see this astonishing film in 1975 you like I, will have never forgotten the deco Hollywood horror of DAY OF THE LOCUST, nor the queasy performances, perfectly realised.

    Also at the time in cinema release on other films was one of the best movie trailers ever made. The trailer was imagery put to the song "Isn't it romantic" alerting moviegoers to a brilliantly bitter experience ahead. My friends and I rushed to the cinema the week it opened and were not disappointed. Other comments here give far too much of the story away and some hilariously 'don't get it' but let me say that of you ever want to see a cross between CABARET and WHATS THE MATTER WITH HELEN and BABY JANE and other powerhouse exercises in delusion, this is your film. The quality of the whole production, especially the art direction and the photography is the very best......and the music soundtrack is one to find...old Lps still exist and are well worth finding , as is the tape. I welcome the DVD release of this awesome film . A genuine knockout.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

    Ändern
    • Wissenswertes
      Actress Peg Entwistle actually did commit suicide by jumping from the top of the "Hollywood" sign in the hills above Hollywood in 1932. She is being talked about by a Tour Guide while Tod Hackett (William Atherton) and Faye Greener (Karen Black) are on a date.
    • Patzer
      The film opens at a sightseeing/tourist spot and parking area at the foot of the "H" in the Hollywoodland sign. No such facility has ever existed as that part of the hill is too steep for road construction. The real road passes behind the sign and above it.
    • Zitate

      Homer Simpson: [introducing himself] Simpson, Homer Simpson.

    • Alternative Versionen
      Although the UK cinema release was uncut the 2004 DVD version was cut by 46 secs by the BBFC to remove scenes of cockfighting.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Give Me Your Answer True (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Jeepers Creepers
      Music by Harry Warren

      Lyrics by Johnny Mercer

      Sung by Louis Armstrong

      Courtesy of MCA Records

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 7. November 1975 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
      • Französisch
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Como plaga de langosta
    • Drehorte
      • Ennis House - 2607 Glendower Avenue, Los Feliz, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(house of movie producer)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Long Road Productions
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    Box Office

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    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 42 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 24 Min.(144 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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