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Unheimliche Schattenlichter

Originaltitel: Twilight Zone: The Movie
  • 1983
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 41 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
43.419
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Unheimliche Schattenlichter (1983)
Official Trailer
trailer wiedergeben1:16
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Dystopische Science-FictionÜbernatürlicher HorrorZeitreiseHorrorScience-Fiction

Vier Horror- und Science-Fiction-Segmente unter der Regie von vier berühmten Regisseuren, die jeweils eine neue Version einer klassischen Geschichte aus Rod Serlings bahnbrechender Fernsehse... Alles lesenVier Horror- und Science-Fiction-Segmente unter der Regie von vier berühmten Regisseuren, die jeweils eine neue Version einer klassischen Geschichte aus Rod Serlings bahnbrechender Fernsehserie darstellen.Vier Horror- und Science-Fiction-Segmente unter der Regie von vier berühmten Regisseuren, die jeweils eine neue Version einer klassischen Geschichte aus Rod Serlings bahnbrechender Fernsehserie darstellen.

  • Regie
    • Joe Dante
    • John Landis
    • George Miller
  • Drehbuch
    • John Landis
    • George Clayton Johnson
    • Richard Matheson
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Dan Aykroyd
    • Albert Brooks
    • Vic Morrow
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,5/10
    43.419
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Joe Dante
      • John Landis
      • George Miller
    • Drehbuch
      • John Landis
      • George Clayton Johnson
      • Richard Matheson
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Dan Aykroyd
      • Albert Brooks
      • Vic Morrow
    • 189Benutzerrezensionen
    • 99Kritische Rezensionen
    • 44Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Gewinn & 8 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Twilight Zone: The Movie
    Trailer 1:16
    Twilight Zone: The Movie

    Fotos204

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    + 196
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    Topbesetzung76

    Ändern
    Dan Aykroyd
    Dan Aykroyd
    • Passenger…
    Albert Brooks
    Albert Brooks
    • Car Driver (prologue)
    Vic Morrow
    Vic Morrow
    • Bill Connor (segment "Time Out")
    Doug McGrath
    Doug McGrath
    • Larry (segment "Time Out")
    Charles Hallahan
    Charles Hallahan
    • Ray (segment "Time Out")
    Rainer Peets
    • German Officer (segment "Time Out")
    • (as Remus Peets)
    Kai Wulff
    Kai Wulff
    • German Officer (segment "Time Out")
    Sue Dugan
    • Waitress No. 1 (segment "Time Out")
    Debby Porter
    Debby Porter
    • Waitress No. 2 (segment "Time Out")
    Steven Williams
    Steven Williams
    • Bar Patron (segment "Time Out")
    Annette Claudier
    • French Monther (segment "Time Out")
    Joseph Hieu
    • Vietnamese (segment "Time Out")
    Al Leong
    Al Leong
    • Vietnamese (segment "Time Out")
    Stephen Bishop
    • Charming G.I. (segment "Time Out")
    Thomas Byrd
    • G.I. (segment "Time Out")
    Vincent J. Isaac
    • G.I. (segment "Time Out")
    William S. Taylor
    William S. Taylor
    • G.I. (segment "Time Out")
    • (as William B. Taylor)
    Domingo Ambriz
    • G.I. (segment "Time Out")
    • Regie
      • Joe Dante
      • John Landis
      • George Miller
    • Drehbuch
      • John Landis
      • George Clayton Johnson
      • Richard Matheson
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen189

    6,543.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7claudio_carvalho

    Tragic and Cult

    Prologue: a driver has a big surprise with his passenger (8) Segment 1 ("Time Out"): a bigot man hates Jews, Black and Asian people. One day he will live in the World War II, hunted down by KKK and attacked in Vietnam War and feel the effects of his hatred. Good episode with a surprising conclusion (7).

    Segment 2 ("Kick the Can"): In a nursing home, the elder inhabitants learn that their minds can keep them young. Reasonable episode only with a great homage to "The Twilight Zone" (Episode 3.21) "Kick the Can". (6).

    Segment 3 ("It´s a Good Life"): a traveler hits a boy in a bicycle with her car and takes the boy home. Soon she learns that the powerful boy brought her home indeed. Good episode with a silly and disappointing conclusion (7).

    Segment 4 ("Nightmare at 20,000 feet"): a writer is scary to fly and soon he sees a monstrous creature destroying the airplane engines during a stormy night. Certainly the best episode (8).

    Divided in prologue and four segments, "Twilight Zone: The Movie" is a tragic and cult movie. Tragic since Vic Morrow, the unforgettable Sgt. Saunders of "Combat!" series, died in a weird accident when the helicopter crashed on him and two children while making a scene. Directed by four great directors - Joe Dante (segment "It's a Good Life"); John Landis (prologue/segment "Time Out"); George Miller (segment "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet"); and Steven Spielberg (segment "Kick the Can") - and with great names in the cast - Vic Morrow, Dan Aykroyd, Albert Brooks, Kathleen Quinlan, John Lithgow among many others, "Twilight Zone: The Movie" is highly recommended for fans of sci-fi and horror. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "No Limite da Realidade" ("In the Limit of Reality")

    Note: On 31 July 2023, I saw this film again.
    8preppy-3

    Very good

    An affectionate homage to the old TV series. Three old episodes were updated and a new one was written. It's also narrated by Burgess Meredith who starred in quite a few of the original TV series episodes.

    It starts off with a quick little prologue with Albert Brooks and Dan Aykroyd. It's quick, funny and provides a nice little jolt.

    The first segment was newly written for the movie. It involves a bitter and racist man (Vic Morrow) getting a taste of his own medicine. This episode is clouded by the three deaths it caused--Morrow was decapitated by a helicopter blade and two Vitenamese children were crushed. John Landis (who directed this) was found not guilty in the deaths. As it stands this isn't very good. It's simplistic and heavy-handed--like a bad Zone episode.

    The second one is directed by Steven Spielberg. It involves an old man (Scatman Crothers) gently bringing to life the old people at a retirement home. I'll be the first to admit that this is way too syrupy--but I have a fondness for it. The acting is good, it has a great music score and, I admit, it leaves me a little misty-eyed.

    The third is directed by Joe Dante. It's a remake about a little boy who can make all of his wishes come true. It's well-directed with some truly incredible special effects and a good performance by Kathleen Quinlan. But it's seriously damaged by a silly happy ending (the original didn't have that). Billy Mumy (the star of the original) has a bit part and Dante regular Dick Miller shows up as Walter Paisley.

    The fourth is the best. It's directed by George Miller and is a remake of the William Shatner episode where he spots a gremlin tearing apart the plane he's flying on. The gremlin in the original looked pretty ridiculous--like a teddy bear. Here John Lithgow plays the passenger and the gremlin is more than a little scary-looking. This segment moves and has a few great jolts. Also Carol Serling (Rod Serling's wife I believe) has a bit part.

    All in all an enjoyable film. I liked it when I saw it in a theatre in 1983 and it still holds up today. I give it an 8.
    7Hey_Sweden

    Hey, you wanna see something *really* scary?

    Feature film expansion of legendary TV series is uneven overall, but it does have its moments, and it does thankfully follow the rule of saving the best for last. Four prominent directors are brought together to create, in glorious colour, some classic episodes of the series, with an impressive roster of stars and character players. At least along the way it manages to create some enjoyable jolts. Burgess Meredith, star of 'Time Enough at Last', one of the best known and most beloved of all episodes, is the narrator for this trip into some bizarre places.

    Unfortunately the movie will always have an enormous stigma attached to it due to the untimely and horrific death of actor Vic Morrow and two child extras during the shooting of Segment 1. That may very well leave a bad taste in the mouth of many people watching. It's up to the individual viewer as to how much this affects their enjoyment of the film.

    The prologue and the first segment are actually originals written by director John Landis. Dan Aykroyd and Albert Brooks are fun as a passenger and driver who come up some with some amusing ways to entertain each other until Aykroyd decides it's time for Brooks to get a good scare. This gets us off to a good start because Landis does understand that with the TV show the payoff was a most important element.

    Segment 1 sees Morrow playing an unrepentant bigot who gets a major dose of his own intolerance when he's mistaken for a Jew by Nazis, a black by KKK members, and a Vietnamese man by American troops in 'Nam. This is a very dark episode that doesn't end too satisfactorily, but Morrow is excellent, the look of Paris during WWII is nicely realized, the pacing is effective, and there's a great in joke referring back to Landis's "Animal House".

    Segment 2, Steven Spielberg's remake of "Kick the Can", sees wonderfully genial Scatman Crothers injecting some magic into the lives of senior citizens in an old folks' home. Like Segment 1, it's unfortunately not subtle about its message, and is so syrupy sweet that it really doesn't fit in with the other segments here. The actors are very likable, fortunately; Crothers manages to make it worth sitting through.

    Segment 3 tells the tale of "It's a Boy's Life", in which a creepy kid (Jeremy Licht) makes the acquaintance of travelling schoolteacher Kathleen Quinlan. This kid can bend reality to suit his whims, lives in a house with bizarre designs, likes his hamburgers with peanut butter topping, and lives for cartoons. And his "family" lives in mortal terror of him. The work of Joe Dante, this serves as a counterpoint to Spielberg's tale the way that it depicts childish fantasies run amok. Great cartoon style monster work by Rob Bottin helps in the enjoyment of this segment; this is where the film starts getting really good. Bill Mumy, the kid in the original episode, plays a diner patron.

    Segment 4, directed by George Miller of the "Mad Max" series, is far and away the best, an over the top remake of "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet", in which terrified airplane passenger John Lithgow believes he sees a creature busy destroying the planes' engines as it flies through a storm. Lots of good atmosphere and intensity here, with a top notch unhinged performance by Lithgow and a great creature, designed by Craig Reardon & Michael McCracken and performed by actor Larry Cedar.

    With a lot of familiar faces in the small roles (ex. Charles Hallahan, Doug McGrath, Bill Quinn, Selma Diamond, the almighty Dick Miller (once again playing 'Walter Paisley'), Kevin McCarthy, William Schallert, Cherie Currie, Nancy Cartwright, John Dennis Johnston, Eduard Franz, and Donna Dixon), and wonderful music by Jerry Goldsmith, this certainly remains an entertaining film to watch for its duration, if not a great one. Hopefully it will inspire people to check out the TV series and see why it's so admired.

    Seven out of 10.
    5Doylenf

    The TV shows were better...

    After the opening prologue with DAN AKYROYD and ALBERT BROOKS, as bored drivers on a lonely country highway who like to play pranks, TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE offers four stories, supposedly in the vein of stories that Rod Serling wrote for the famous TV series. Not until the final segment, NIGHTMARE AT 20,000 FEET does it offer the kind of fright stuff worthy of being in this anthology.

    And it's a minor gem of its kind with JOHN LITHGOW giving an amazingly deft performance as a man totally afraid of flying who should have taken tranquilizers before he peered out the window. What he saw on the wing of the plane would have frightened anyone out of their wits--and, of course, no one believes him.

    It's this final episode that makes the film itself worth watching. None of the other segments have enough punch to keep the viewer awake, let alone entertained. VIC MORROW's unfortunate accident came about during filming of a Vietnam sequence which does not appear in this version of the film--but he does give a convincing portrait of a bigot who gets his comeuppance. Very ironic.

    Summing up: All of these stories were told with more style and suspense on the old TV shows. Strictly second-rate.
    7jrs-8

    Hit and Miss

    As is the case with movie anthologies, "Twilight Zone - The Movie" is hit and miss. If there was a movie destined to have four short stories that were all home runs it was this one. But the film falls short partially due to the expectations of the fans of the TV show and partially due to the fans expectations of the results of the four directors. What was most interesting back in 1983 was which ones hit and which ones missed.

    The prologue gets things going in the right direction with Albert Brooks and Dan Aykroyd as two guys traveling down a dark and seemingly lonely road. What transpires in pure Twilight Zone. Then we move into the first story which is directed by (as was the opening prologue) John Landis. Landis, who got the whole project off the ground, foolishly decided to go with an original story instead of updating a classic episode. His story is that of a bigot who constantly and bitterly complains about the minorities who are getting job promotions and moving into his neighborhood. Of course the bigot then gets a real taste of what it feels like to be frowned upon as a minority. Basically that is the whole story in a nutshell. Landis provides no real twists to his story to give us that Twilight Zone flavor after the first few minutes. Once we see where the story is headed it never changes directions. For film buffs Landis adds a nice touch with a subtle reference to his classic "Animal House" in the Vietnam section of the story. Of course it should be noted that this was the story being shot when Vic Morrow and two children were tragically killed which would explain its abrupt ending. The two children are never seen which would suggest perhaps Landis had more to tell but we'll never know. Of the four this is the weakest story.

    Story two is not much better then the first which is particularly surprising since Steven Spielberg is at the helm for this one. It's a remake of "Kick the Can" which was not one of my favorite episodes from the series and Spielberg adds nothing to his version. It's the tale of residents of an old folks home who encounter a new resident who promises them something no one of this Earth could possibly give them. While the story and individual moments are very sweet it goes absolutely nowhere. Having just come off "E.T." perhaps Spielberg was in that same gushy mood at that time.

    Story three picks things up drastically and heads us in the right direction. Directed by Joe Dante who, at that time, was best known for "The Howling" with films such as "Gremlins" still in his future, this is the story of a little boy who hears people's thoughts and has a way of "wishing people away" if he gets angry enough at them. Kathleen Quinlan plays an unsuspecting traveler who goes to the boy's home and realizes almost immediately things are not normal. The star of this story is the art direction and sets as we are transformed into almost cartoon like worlds that are both funny and frightening.

    The last and best story is the tale of a frightened airline passenger (well played by John Lithgow) who threatens the safety of everyone when he seems to be the only person that sees a creature on the wing of the airplane. George Miller, best known for the "Mad Max" movies, was smart enough to pick a popular episode from the series and he delivers with a bang. When you leave the theater this is the story you remember most.

    On the whole the film is worth watching especially after the first 45 minutes. Landis and Spielberg perhaps were a little too high on their horses and thought whatever they did would work. Apparently they under estimated the legions of Zone fans. I'd love to see someone try another Twilight Zone movie someday and try re-working some of the other most famous episodes. I should also mention the terrific musical score by Jerry Goldsmith. Its one of his least mentioned but I think it's one of his best.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The scene being shot at the time of Vic Morrow's fatal accident was added to the script late in the filming in an attempt to "soften" his bigoted character Bill Connor, and give him some redemption: while fleeing from an American helicopter attack on a deserted Vietnamese village, he sees two orphaned children. Bill decides to save them no matter what the cost, so he carries them under his arms and wades through the river to safety. He then finds himself back in Nazi-occupied France again, the two children having time-jumped with him. The two Nazi officers chasing Bill take the children away for execution, and take Bill to a train which ends the segment. Due to the helicopter accident that claimed the life of Morrow and child actors Renee Chen and My-ca Dinh Le, all scenes featuring the children were completely cut, and they do not appear in the film. Bill's original scripted ending was kept in, leaving Bill's character change largely unaddressed and his fate unknown.
    • Patzer
      An exterior shot of the airplane in Segment #4 shows the landing gear to be in the down position. The pilot later comments that the plane would be landing in twenty minutes, far too long for gear to be down prior to touchdown.
    • Zitate

      Car Passenger: Hey... you wanna see something really scary?

    • Alternative Versionen
      CBS edited 8 minutes from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in At the Movies: Twilight Zone: The Movie/The Survivors/The Grey Fox/The Ruling Class/The Evil Dead (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Nights Are Forever
      Performed by Jennifer Warnes

      Music by Jerry Goldsmith

      Lyrics by John Bettis

      Produced by Bruce Botnick with James Newton Howard

      [Segment #1: playing when William enters the bar]

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    FAQ21

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 20. Januar 1984 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
      • Deutsch
      • Vietnamesisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Al filo de la realidad
    • Drehorte
      • 15238 Victory Boulevard, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(bar in segment #1; exterior & interior)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Amblin Entertainment
      • Warner Bros.
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    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 10.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 29.450.919 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 6.614.366 $
      • 26. Juni 1983
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 29.450.919 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 41 Min.(101 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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