[go: up one dir, main page]

    Kalender veröffentlichenDie Top 250 FilmeDie beliebtesten FilmeFilme nach Genre durchsuchenBeste KinokasseSpielzeiten und TicketsNachrichten aus dem FilmFilm im Rampenlicht Indiens
    Was läuft im Fernsehen und was kann ich streamen?Die Top 250 TV-SerienBeliebteste TV-SerienSerien nach Genre durchsuchenNachrichten im Fernsehen
    Was gibt es zu sehenAktuelle TrailerIMDb OriginalsIMDb-AuswahlIMDb SpotlightLeitfaden für FamilienunterhaltungIMDb-Podcasts
    EmmysSuperheroes GuideSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideBest Of 2025 So FarDisability Pride MonthSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAlle Ereignisse
    Heute geborenDie beliebtesten PromisPromi-News
    HilfecenterBereich für BeitragendeUmfragen
Für Branchenprofis
  • Sprache
  • Vollständig unterstützt
  • English (United States)
    Teilweise unterstützt
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Anmelden
  • Vollständig unterstützt
  • English (United States)
    Teilweise unterstützt
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
App verwenden
  • Besetzung und Crew-Mitglieder
  • Benutzerrezensionen
  • Wissenswertes
  • FAQ
IMDbPro

Reise nach Indien

Originaltitel: A Passage to India
  • 1984
  • 6
  • 2 Std. 44 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
22.371
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Reise nach Indien (1984)
US Home Video Trailer from Columbia Tristar
trailer wiedergeben1:56
2 Videos
95 Fotos
Historical EpicPeriod DramaAdventureDramaHistory

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuCultural mistrust and false accusations doom a friendship in British colonial India between an Indian doctor, an Englishwoman engaged to marry a city magistrate, and an English educator.Cultural mistrust and false accusations doom a friendship in British colonial India between an Indian doctor, an Englishwoman engaged to marry a city magistrate, and an English educator.Cultural mistrust and false accusations doom a friendship in British colonial India between an Indian doctor, an Englishwoman engaged to marry a city magistrate, and an English educator.

  • Regie
    • David Lean
  • Drehbuch
    • E.M. Forster
    • Santha Rama Rau
    • David Lean
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Judy Davis
    • Victor Banerjee
    • Peggy Ashcroft
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    22.371
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • David Lean
    • Drehbuch
      • E.M. Forster
      • Santha Rama Rau
      • David Lean
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Judy Davis
      • Victor Banerjee
      • Peggy Ashcroft
    • 132Benutzerrezensionen
    • 58Kritische Rezensionen
    • 78Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 2 Oscars gewonnen
      • 22 Gewinne & 26 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    A Passage to India
    Trailer 1:56
    A Passage to India
    A Passage to India
    Trailer 1:16
    A Passage to India
    A Passage to India
    Trailer 1:16
    A Passage to India

    Fotos95

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    + 89
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung38

    Ändern
    Judy Davis
    Judy Davis
    • Adela Quested
    Victor Banerjee
    Victor Banerjee
    • Dr. Aziz
    Peggy Ashcroft
    Peggy Ashcroft
    • Mrs. Moore
    James Fox
    James Fox
    • Richard Fielding
    Alec Guinness
    Alec Guinness
    • Professor Godbole
    Nigel Havers
    Nigel Havers
    • Ronny Heaslop
    Richard Wilson
    Richard Wilson
    • Turton
    Antonia Pemberton
    • Mrs. Turton
    Michael Culver
    Michael Culver
    • Major McBryde
    Art Malik
    Art Malik
    • Ali
    Saeed Jaffrey
    Saeed Jaffrey
    • Hamidullah
    Clive Swift
    Clive Swift
    • Major Callendar
    Ann Firbank
    Ann Firbank
    • Mrs. Callendar
    Roshan Seth
    Roshan Seth
    • Amritrao
    Sandra Hotz
    Sandra Hotz
    • Stella
    Rashid Karapiet
    • Das
    H.S. Krishnamurthy
    • Hassan
    Ishaq Bux
    Ishaq Bux
    • Selim
    • Regie
      • David Lean
    • Drehbuch
      • E.M. Forster
      • Santha Rama Rau
      • David Lean
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen132

    7,322.3K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Lechuguilla

    Mercifully, This Is No Epic

    My interest in caves led me to watch this film. A small, but pivotal, part of the film's plot centers on what happens at the Marabar Caves. While the cave segment was a disappointment to me, I was pleasantly surprised by the film as a whole. It was not the grandiose, pretentious cinematic epic I had feared.

    "A Passage To India" tells the story of a young British woman and her elderly traveling companion who journey from England to India, at a time when the British still ruled that country. The film's theme centers on British attitudes toward the people of India. Those attitudes can be summarized as: condescending, snobbish, and racist. It was the English vision of cultural superiority over the Indian people that E.M Forster wrote about in his 1924 novel, upon which the screenplay is based. That cultural vision represents a bygone, imperial era that today seems quaint.

    The cinematography here is excellent, though perhaps not quite as sweeping or majestic as in some of Director Lean's previous films. What comes through in the visuals is India's spectacular scenery. The film's acting is competent. And I liked the film's original score.

    My main complaint is the film's length. It's a two-hour story stretched to fill almost three hours. I would have cut out most, or all, of the crowd and mob scenes because they are not needed, and because they infuse the film with a "cast of thousands" aura that moves the film implicitly in the direction of epic status. Even as is, the film is sufficiently low-key and personal to be enjoyable.
    mrcaw

    One of Lean's Best

    David Lean ended his illustrious career on a high note with this haunting love song to the exotic & sensual world of India.

    The action takes place during the last days of England's rule over colonial England. Much of the emphasis in the movie is placed on the culture clash between the two countrys.

    Judy Davis stars in one of her earliest films as a woman who travels to India on what she imagines will be a romantic adventure to meet up with and marry a waiting fiance.

    The great Dame Peggy Ashcroft portrays the fiance's mother who accompanies Davis on her "Passage To India".

    Alec Guiness is along for the ride in a culture-bending role as a Hindu spiritual man. Guiness's role is in turn played for laughs then for dramatic punch when needed.

    The major conflict in the movies arrives from an ill fated tourist jaunt to the Marabar Caves some miles away.

    What does or does not happen there becomes a legal and moral crisis that involves all the film's key players as well as the entire city.

    The movie is played with sensitivity as well as allowing for the usual David Lean broad strokes of color and light.

    It's one of my favorite movies and definitely appealing to more than the "Merchant & Ivory" crowd.
    8ashishjuyalin

    As an Indian i believe i may help you to understand

    In 1885 Lord Macaulay in very planned way introduced English as an official language of India, a plan equally dangerous like thousand years of third Reich in Europe. Macaulay himself explained during a speech in Kolkata in 1885 that "I have travelled across the length and breadth of India and I have not seen one person who is a beggar, who is a thief. He added "with such a high moral, spiritual cultural heritage and ancient Aryan education system (Language Sanskrit) I do not think we would ever conquer this country, unless we break the very backbone of education system of this nation.

    However Macaulay's language experiment resulted very strange. It not only fractured the complex Indian society but divided the schools of thought into fraction. In movie Dr.Aziz symbolically represents the agonised face of so called modern educated Indians.

    The director of this movie is very talented person who exactly know this problem. Now what exactly happening in the movie is a British young woman fascinated with ideas of elephants, snakes, tropical forests and mysteries is travelling across India. Moreover she is young and deep inside she is contemplating the true meaning of love. While in India she meets Dr. Aziz who on other hand is a product of Macaulay's language experiment. Dr Aziz is an educated person who has nothing to with Indian national movement (background is of decade of 20's) or in other words he is a simple nice Muslim man who do his job, earn comparatively better than other poor Indians and has a good social status in the local community. However he remains depressed with the surrounding atmosphere which is full of dirt, poor people etc. Symbolically he is a face of new crop who thinks and if given a chance, act like elite English. Unfortunately since he is just an average person and not an intellectual, he can not see that a British who is a foreigner in his country do not see any difference between him and other poor. He works hard and do not miss any opportunity to proof that their is a difference and it exist.

    Movie reaches to the height of climax when Dr. Aziz gets an opportunity to take Ms Quested to an excursion to Malabar caves. And then comes the most beautiful, suspenseful and artistic scene of the movie. For few moment in that silent lazy afternoon, Ms Quested learn during an exceptional personal interaction (An interaction which was not supposed to be happened between an Indian and a English) about Dr. Aziz's love for his wife who died few years back. Already hypnotised and surprised with the Indian culture she gets locked with a strange feeling when she learn that Dr, Aziz never saw his wife before getting married. Back to her life she never imagined if being in love/marriage with someone whom you have never seen was possible. After all due to her basic human tendency, she for a fraction of moment imagined Dr. Aziz as a perfect man. Her extreme imagination takes her to indefinite trauma and suddenly everything looks ugly, horrible, dark and hopeless. Now gushed with guilt feeling she can not justify her imaginations in a real world.

    In case of Dr. Aziz he is again in a gloomy world because Ms Quested without giving any notice is now out of his reach. An innocent human to human interaction becomes a case of racial dominance & national extremism.

    Fanatic Indians have coloured it with Indian national moment whereas British are convinced that Indians doesn't matter educated or uneducated are on same line. Ironically Dr. Aziz who is surprised, frustrated due to silence of Miss Quested is no longer an old simple man. He too now believes that English are corrupting his country. Ms. Nobody knows the internal truth.
    10Spleen

    Treads the borderline of historical fiction and fantasy with breathtaking skill

    Never mind whether or not it's as good as "The Bridge on the River Kwai", "Lawrence of Arabia", "Doctor Zhivago", et al.; the point is, it's a great film that was clearly made by the same David Lean that made the earlier masterpieces.

    The stuff that usually gets dismissed with a wave of the hand - the art direction, the music (Maurice Jarre reserved his best scores for David Lean, although there's less music here than there usually is), the photography, the editing, the indefinable assuredness of narrative flow - everything that makes up the heart and soul of cinema, in fact - is as marvellous as ever. It's amazing enough when you consider that this was Lean's first film in fourteen years. More astonishing is that it was the first film on which he's credited as editor in forty-two years. Forty-two years earlier, he was working for Michael Powell (the only other British director as good as Lean), who considered him the best editor in the world; and while Lean's wielding the scissors again after all that time may have made very little difference to his overall style, I still think there's something special - even more special than usual - about the way "A Passage to India" flows. Maybe it's that Lean adapted the screenplay, then shot it, then cut it himself, but he has such an strong feel for the pulse of the story, such an unerring feel for what follows from what, that even the several jump cuts - jump cuts are usually the most ugly, the most offensively flashy, and the most intrusive of all cinematic devices - are beautiful, natural, even classical. In a way you don't notice that they're there.

    I've never heard it said that two-time collaborators Powell and Lean have much in common - and they don't. But of all David Lean's creations this one comes closest to being like a Powell and Pressburger picture. There's an element of mysticism (threatening as well as comforting) darting in and out of the story with such fleetness and subtlety that it's hard to tell when it's there and when it's not; and, of course, the incident at the caves (explained exactly as much as it needs to be, and no more) could as easily have come from one of Pressburger's scripts as from Forster's novel. If you've seen "Black Narcissus", admittedly a very different kind of film, you don't need me to draw attention to the points of similarity.

    Lean's imagery may be less openly bizarre than Powell's but the effect can be much the same. "A Passage to India", although it lacks the beauty of the films of the three Lean films shot by Freddie Young, contains Lean's most disturbingly powerful shots, yet they're of such things as these: monkeys (echoed later on in the film by a startling shot of a man dressed like a monkey - actually, that IS the kind of thing I can see Powell doing), someone clutching her hand to her chest, the moon, the first raindrops of a storm hitting a dirty window pane, even water - simple cutaway shots of nothing but moonlit water.

    I haven't read the book, but I do know that if you HAVE to have read the book to see what's wrong with the film, why, then, there's nothing wrong with it. I don't know how much of the book has been lost in the translation but I do know that if too much has been lost to make a rich and powerful film, then whatever has been lost has been more than adequately replaced.
    8Wuchakk

    West clashes with East in 1920's India

    Released in 1985 and directed by David Lean from E.M. Forster's novel, "A Passage to India" is a historical drama/adventure about a young English woman, Adela Quested (Judy Davis), who experiences culture shock when she travels to India circa 1920 to possibly marry her betrothed, a British magistrate (Nigel Havers). Her companion for the sojourn is his mother (Peggy Ashcroft). With a kindly Indian, Dr. Aziz (Victor Banerjee), they take an excursion to the mysterious Marabar Caves. But something strange happens at the caves and Aziz' world is turned upside down when Adela accuses him of a crime. James Fox plays Aziz' English friend while Alec Guinness is on hand as an Indian sage.

    This was David Lean's last film and, as far as I'm concerned, it's as great as his other films, like "A Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957), "Lawrence of Arabia" (1962) and "Doctor Zhivago" (1965). To appreciate it you have to favor his epic, realistic, not-everything-spelled-out style.

    The movie's about the clash of British arrogance & Victorian propriety with a fascinatingly alien and more wild Indian culture. It's thematically similar to 1993's "Sirens," highlighted by Davis' stunning lead performance and only hampered by Guinness' miscasting as an Indian (but that's a minor cavil).

    The film runs 164 minutes and was shot in India.

    GRADE: A-

    ***SPOILER ALERT*** (Don't read further unless you've seen the movie)

    The movie goes out of its way to show that Aziz is innocent of attempted rape without spelling it out. So what happened to Adela in the caves? She suffered a panic attack due to culture shock and the mounting apprehension of marrying a prim & proper coldfish she doesn't love. The scratches she suffers are from the cacti she runs into while fleeing the caves. Aziz was her subconscious scapegoat. But, give her credit, she was able to resist immense social pressure, realize the truth, and boldly declare it, despite the negative social ramifications.

    Mehr wie diese

    Ryans Tochter
    7,4
    Ryans Tochter
    Doktor Schiwago
    7,9
    Doktor Schiwago
    Die großen Erwartungen
    7,8
    Die großen Erwartungen
    Ein Platz im Herzen
    7,4
    Ein Platz im Herzen
    Lost and Found: The Story of Cook's Anchor
    6,8
    Lost and Found: The Story of Cook's Anchor
    Killing Fields - Schreiendes Land
    7,8
    Killing Fields - Schreiendes Land
    Die barfüßige Gräfin
    6,9
    Die barfüßige Gräfin
    Die Affäre der Sunny von B.
    7,2
    Die Affäre der Sunny von B.
    Oliver Twist
    7,8
    Oliver Twist
    Herr im Haus bin ich
    7,7
    Herr im Haus bin ich
    Lilien auf dem Felde
    7,5
    Lilien auf dem Felde
    Traum meines Lebens
    7,1
    Traum meines Lebens

    Handlung

    Ändern

    Wusstest du schon

    Ändern
    • Wissenswertes
      The relationship between director Sir David Lean and Sir Alec Guinness deteriorated during the making of the movie. The final straw came for Guinness when he found out that a large chunk of his scenes had been left on the cutting room floor by Lean. Neither man ever met or spoke to the other again. Lean also managed to fall out with Dame Peggy Ashcroft during production with Lean deliberately shunning her from his table during lunch and dinner. Ashcroft, for her part, was unconcerned about his behaviour and dismissed it as Lean's usual sulky petulance.
    • Patzer
      When Adela climbs up the hill and goes into the cave, she is wearing white shoes. When she runs down the hill, she is wearing black shoes.
    • Zitate

      Mrs. Moore: My dear, life rarely gives us what we want at the moment we consider appropriate. Adventures do occur, but not punctually.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in At the Movies: Johnny Dangerously/Micki + Maude/Birdy/A Passage to India (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      Tea For Two
      Written by Vincent Youmans and Irving Caesar

    Top-Auswahl

    Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
    Anmelden

    FAQ20

    • How long is A Passage to India?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 26. April 1985 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Hindi
    • Auch bekannt als
      • A Passage to India
    • Drehorte
      • Bangalore Palace, Bangalore, Karnataka, Indien
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • EMI Films
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 16.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 27.187.653 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 84.580 $
      • 16. Dez. 1984
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 33.006.105 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 44 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

    Zu dieser Seite beitragen

    Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen
    Reise nach Indien (1984)
    Oberste Lücke
    What is the German language plot outline for Reise nach Indien (1984)?
    Antwort
    • Weitere Lücken anzeigen
    • Erfahre mehr über das Beitragen
    Seite bearbeiten

    Mehr entdecken

    Zuletzt angesehen

    Bitte aktiviere Browser-Cookies, um diese Funktion nutzen zu können. Weitere Informationen
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    Melde dich an für Zugriff auf mehr InhalteMelde dich an für Zugriff auf mehr Inhalte
    Folge IMDb in den sozialen Netzwerken
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    Für Android und iOS
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    • Hilfe
    • Inhaltsverzeichnis
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • IMDb-Daten lizenzieren
    • Pressezimmer
    • Werbung
    • Jobs
    • Allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen
    • Datenschutzrichtlinie
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, ein Amazon-Unternehmen

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.