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Mephisto

  • 1981
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 26 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,7/10
12.187
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Klaus Maria Brandauer in Mephisto (1981)
Official Trailer 4K Restorations
trailer wiedergeben1:38
1 Video
50 Fotos
Drama

Ein Bühnenschauspieler steht vor einem Dilemma: Er muss seine unpolitische Haltung aufgeben und sich der Reichsdoktrin fügen oder dem Vergessen ins Auge sehen. Doch die faustischen Geschäfte... Alles lesenEin Bühnenschauspieler steht vor einem Dilemma: Er muss seine unpolitische Haltung aufgeben und sich der Reichsdoktrin fügen oder dem Vergessen ins Auge sehen. Doch die faustischen Geschäfte enden nie gut. Was ist der Preis des Erfolgs?Ein Bühnenschauspieler steht vor einem Dilemma: Er muss seine unpolitische Haltung aufgeben und sich der Reichsdoktrin fügen oder dem Vergessen ins Auge sehen. Doch die faustischen Geschäfte enden nie gut. Was ist der Preis des Erfolgs?

  • Regie
    • István Szabó
  • Drehbuch
    • Péter Dobai
    • István Szabó
    • Klaus Mann
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Klaus Maria Brandauer
    • Ildikó Bánsági
    • Krystyna Janda
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,7/10
    12.187
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • István Szabó
    • Drehbuch
      • Péter Dobai
      • István Szabó
      • Klaus Mann
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Klaus Maria Brandauer
      • Ildikó Bánsági
      • Krystyna Janda
    • 31Benutzerrezensionen
    • 31Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 15 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Mephisto
    Trailer 1:38
    Mephisto

    Fotos50

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    Topbesetzung73

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    Klaus Maria Brandauer
    Klaus Maria Brandauer
    • Hendrik Höfgen
    Ildikó Bánsági
    Ildikó Bánsági
    • Nicoletta von Niebuhr
    Krystyna Janda
    Krystyna Janda
    • Barbara Bruckner
    Rolf Hoppe
    Rolf Hoppe
    • General
    György Cserhalmi
    György Cserhalmi
    • Hans Miklas
    Péter Andorai
    • Otto Ulrichs
    Karin Boyd
    • Juliette Martens
    Christine Harbort
    • Lotte Lindenthal
    Tamás Major
    Tamás Major
    • Oskar Kroge, színigazgató
    Ildikó Kishonti
    • Dora Martin, primadonna
    Mária Bisztrai
    • Motzné, tragika
    Sándor Lukács
    • Rolf Bonetti, bonviván
    Ágnes Bánfalvy
    • Angelika Siebert, naiva
    • (as Bánfalvi Ágnes)
    Judit Hernádi
    Judit Hernádi
    • Rachel Mohrenwitz, drámai szende
    Vilmos Kun
    • Ügyelõ
    Ida Versényi
    • Súgó
    István Komlós
    • Kis Böck, Öltöztetõ
    Sári Gencsy
    • Bella Höfgen
    • Regie
      • István Szabó
    • Drehbuch
      • Péter Dobai
      • István Szabó
      • Klaus Mann
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen31

    7,712.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10faraaj-1

    Klaus Maria Brandauer is magnificent

    Klaus Maria Brandauer, the celebrated German stage actor, is not really a big fan of cinema. Largely unknown to cinematic audiences, he made a big splash with his debut Mephisto.

    Mephisto is the ancient legend of the man who sells his soul to the devil in return for worldly gains - as told by Faust. Klaus plays a Hamburg stage actor famous for his portrayal of Mephisto on stage. Flirting with socialism, he embraces the leadership of the Nazi party in order to move to Berlin and rise in the theatre hierarchy. He does rise and continues to ingratiate himself with the Nazi Generals and Prime Minister and rises to the very top where his full oratorical abilities can be displayed. He also shows a complete lack of self respect or conviction for anything but his personal worldly success and power - which he does use on occasion to save less favoured colleagues.

    Klaus has given a remarkable performance in this film - all physicality. Throughout much of the movie he is poker faced and relies on his hands and his body to express himself fully. Its a very unique, one-of-a-kind performance that makes this film so watchable. The narrative itself is chopped and may sub-plots are introduced then cut short.
    csm23

    Inner Darkness and Outer Exposure

    We're all familiar with the archetypal Faustian Bargain, where, in exchange for your soul, the devil grants your wishes. But Why might someone might want to make such a bargain? I mean, there are the common lusts and desires; but, the question still remains: What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul? Mephisto suggests an answer. And it's not to be found in evil machinations of the Prince of Darkness and his minions, or any such nonsense. It's found in the human psyche.

    Brilliantly played by Klaus Brandauer (Out of Africa, White Fang), Hendrik Hoefgen is a man haunted by insecurity. At the core of his being is shame. From the age of twelve, he tells his wife, he's always felt ashamed. So he always wears a mask, because he dare not expose his true identity to anyone, for fear of rejection. To hide himself and to medicate his feelings, he adopts a strategy that is all too common: he overcompensates. He buries himself in his work, identifies himself with his work, and becomes an empty creature playing to the crowds, a social chameleon who's a nobody adroitly playing a role. He constantly works on and perfects his social image, alert to the smallest hint of disapprobation in anyone. In this endeavor, his practiced talent of self deception aids him: He says to himself, after he's sold out to the Nazis, that he's satisfied with his success, because it means that many people love him. He's the perfect actor, even for himself. He's a public persona, nothing more. In the flower of his fame, he's a hollow shell. Mephisto is the most brilliantly produced drama on this subject I've ever seen. It's absolutely enthralling. I highly recommend it as one of the best films ever made, by anyone.
    10debonville

    Mephisto or Faust?

    This film faithfully recreates the novel written in 1936 by Klaus Mann. It is a reflection of the age old temptation of Man, the story of Goethe's Faust. Karl Maria Brandauer is magnificent as Hendrik Höfgen, the obsessed "actor" who will do anything to gain wealth and fame. He first betrays the world around him, and then his inner values are swept away as he finally enters the inner sanctum of Nazi Germany. Is true theatre on stage or in the handshake that Höfgen makes in the prime minister's box behind the audience? Everything in this movie revolves around Höfgen's downward spiral into the abyss; the initial ascent to stardom was but an illusion. Mann instinctively knew that tragedy would befall his country when a pact was made between Hitler and the financial, industrial and military élites of Germany - remember the book was written nine years before that country's downfall. View the movie and read the book. Two truly artistic achievements! Thumbs up to István Szabó and K.M. Brandauer who managed to reveal everything in Höfgen's character.
    10lee_eisenberg

    the Devil doesn't always carry a pitchfork

    Everyone knows the story of Faust: a man sells his soul to the Devil in exchange for something. Well, as we learned in the Rolling Stones' song "Sympathy for the Devil", the Prince of Darkness doesn't necessarily appear as a mustachioed red being with a bifurcated tail. In "Mephisto", the Devil appears as an ideology-turned-governmental-system: Nazism. And in this case, the Devil doesn't request your soul, but rather a favor: that you work for it. Such is the fate of actor Heinz Hoefgen (Klaus Maria Brandauer). Hoefgen has felt shame all his life and has often worn white make-up, as if to hide behind it. But the Nazis make him feel powerful, and so he works for them; metaphorically, he sells his soul to them.

    "Mephisto" proves not only the mastery of Germany's film industry, but also what a great director Istvan Szabo is (also shown in "Sunshine" and "Being Julia").
    chaos-rampant

    The machinery of self

    This is not as deeply felt as Tarkovsky, nor as ambiguously sketched as Resnais. It works from a 'real world', a historic one at that. But it's a good film because it's committed to clearly spin and align the different layers of self.

    The story is Faust, both the film and the play-within. Our film is about an actor who sells his soul for a gilded life on the stage, the play is where he is Mephisto - not Faust - and tries to reason with his decision to be Faust, and a third layer is about an era, Nazi Germany in the early years that was also about a Faustian bargain and staged images of power. The protagonist is an actor from the German stage and plays one. It has a Hungarian filmmaker at the helm who knows probably too well the type of life from the Eastern Bloc.

    So this succeeds where Hollywood's Cabaret felt contrived and false, because everyone is a step closer to the nervous soul of that world.

    Something is quite brilliantly handled here, and I believe it's this; one of the conceits of our actor, a leftist in the early days, is for a Peoples Theater that directly involves and agitates into action. Of course that's all gone when the Nazis come into power, with their Wagnerian notions on the ideal and the pure. He has to do Hamlet, the ambition however is still the same, a play that involves the audience, but in this environment seems ludicrous and hypocritical. It's a state-sponsored event after all.

    Now we see several excerpts of Faust, and more shots of our man backstage in pale Mephisto make-up acting the role in real life, but we never see Hamlet. We never see just how he intended this Peoples Theater. We skip to the curtain call and rapturous audience applause.

    But of course, the main thrust of the film is that of a man, and later society, that simply doesn't know where the stage ends and life begins. His way of involving the people, in a broad sense, is acting out in this world that is all about posturing and pretending, but doing so in a way that actually saves lives.

    The man can thrive in this world, because the world has shifted to align with what he was all along. He doesn't become true, the world becomes as false as he is. It's the stage and lights that shift, so when the narrative planes align for us, we understand that all along he was a decent human being. The chilling finale has him on that stage that is the yawning void where the machinery of self is decided.

    Just who controls the lights that he acts to?

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Based on the novel "Mephisto" by Klaus Mann, which obviously portrays his former brother-in-law Gustaf Gründgens. Therefore, it was banned in Germany until 2000.
    • Patzer
      As Hoefgen leaves the Deux Magots café in Paris after meeting with his first wife, decals for contemporary credit cards - Visa, among them - can be seen on the window of the door.
    • Zitate

      Hendrik Hoefgen: What do they want from me now? After all, I am just an actor.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in At the Movies: The Best Films of 1982 (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Gräfin Dubarry
      Music by Karl Millöcker (as Millöcker)

      Sung by Magda Kalmár

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ

    • How long is Mephisto?
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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 29. April 1981 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Ungarn
      • Westdeutschland
      • Österreich
    • Sprachen
      • Deutsch
      • Ungarisch
      • Englisch
      • Latein
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Mefisto
    • Drehorte
      • Hamburg, Deutschland
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Mafilm
      • Objektív Film
      • Manfred Durniok Filmproduktion
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 26 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.66 : 1

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    Klaus Maria Brandauer in Mephisto (1981)
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