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Bis ans Ende der Welt

  • 1991
  • 12
  • 4 Std. 47 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
12.041
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Bis ans Ende der Welt (1991)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
trailer wiedergeben2:27
1 Video
56 Fotos
CyberpunkEpischScience-Fiction-EposAktionDramaScience-FictionThriller

Ein Autounfall verändert 1999 Claires Leben für immer: Sie rettet Sam und reist mit ihm um die Welt. Der Schriftsteller Eugene folgt ihnen und schreibt ihre Geschichte auf, nachdem eine Meth... Alles lesenEin Autounfall verändert 1999 Claires Leben für immer: Sie rettet Sam und reist mit ihm um die Welt. Der Schriftsteller Eugene folgt ihnen und schreibt ihre Geschichte auf, nachdem eine Methode zur Aufzeichnung von Träumen erfunden wird.Ein Autounfall verändert 1999 Claires Leben für immer: Sie rettet Sam und reist mit ihm um die Welt. Der Schriftsteller Eugene folgt ihnen und schreibt ihre Geschichte auf, nachdem eine Methode zur Aufzeichnung von Träumen erfunden wird.

  • Regie
    • Wim Wenders
  • Drehbuch
    • Peter Carey
    • Wim Wenders
    • Solveig Dommartin
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • William Hurt
    • Solveig Dommartin
    • Pietro Falcone
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    12.041
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Wim Wenders
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Carey
      • Wim Wenders
      • Solveig Dommartin
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • William Hurt
      • Solveig Dommartin
      • Pietro Falcone
    • 104Benutzerrezensionen
    • 43Kritische Rezensionen
    • 63Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Until The End of the World
    Trailer 2:27
    Until The End of the World

    Fotos56

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    Topbesetzung59

    Ändern
    William Hurt
    William Hurt
    • Sam Farber, alias Trevor McPhee
    Solveig Dommartin
    Solveig Dommartin
    • Claire Tourneur
    Pietro Falcone
    • Mario
    Enzo Turrin
    • Doctor
    Chick Ortega
    • Chico Rémy
    Eddy Mitchell
    Eddy Mitchell
    • Raymond Monnet
    Adelle Lutz
    Adelle Lutz
    • Makiko
    Ernie Dingo
    Ernie Dingo
    • Burt
    Jean-Charles Dumay
    • Mechanic
    • (as Jean Charles Dumay)
    Sam Neill
    Sam Neill
    • Eugene Fitzpatrick
    Ernest Berk
    • Anton Farber
    Christine Oesterlein
    • Irina Farber
    • (as Christine Österlein)
    Rüdiger Vogler
    Rüdiger Vogler
    • Phillip Winter
    Diogo Dória
    Diogo Dória
    • Receptionist
    • (as Diogo Doria)
    Amália Rodrigues
    Amália Rodrigues
    • Woman in Street Car
    • (as Amalia Rodrigues)
    Elena Prudnikova
    • Krasikova
    • (as Elena Smirnova)
    Jinzhan Zhang
    • Truck Driver
    • (as Zhang Jinzhan)
    Naoto Takenaka
    Naoto Takenaka
    • Custodian
    • Regie
      • Wim Wenders
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Carey
      • Wim Wenders
      • Solveig Dommartin
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen104

    6,812K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    brittandthatsall

    Another View

    Wenders takes the time to take us to another place that is right beside where you are now, whether you know it or not. Beautifully shot and scored, the movie rewards those that allow it to unfold rather than showing you the plot in the first 15 minutes. With an emphasis on personal emotions rather than "screen presence", the actors reveal much about us all- no super-heroes here.

    Granted it is a long film by "American" standards but who can say how long a film should be? I felt transported to the times & places Wenders takes us, to me this makes a successful film regardless of its length. The storyline is well crafted and the music editing is brilliant; when I hear the music today I think of the film and not the bands that performed it.

    William Hurt has a role (finally) that suits his personality. The pairing of Jeanne Moreau and Max Van Sydow is brilliant. Definitely a movie that should be seen at least once in your lifetime.
    9devojane1

    You don't know the half of it...

    The first 2 times I saw this film (on video), I fell asleep before the end. I thought the beginning was great, though, so I kept at it. When I finally saw the whole thing, I still thought it was pretty good, although rather disjointed. On the whole, I would agree with many other Imdb user comments (too long, incoherent, two movies in one, excellent soundtrack, etc.) That was before I saw the _whole_ movie.

    I had been watching the 158-minute American version and the 179-minute European version (almost indistinguishable) I had heard about the 280-minute "Trilogy" version 4 or 5 years ago when it was screened at the American Cinemateque (sp?) and when I read that it was to be screened again Jan 14 at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood, I figured that a 5-hour (with 2 10-min. intermissions) version would be bloated and slow. I couldn't have been more wrong!

    "Die Trilogie" version of "Bis ans Ende der Welt" (prepared for German released w/ no subtitles) was one of the best movies ever! The extra footage gave more room to the story, the music, and ultimately made for a much more coherent movie. The relationship between Claire and Eugene is better explained, among other things. The Indian satelite is not ignored, like in the "Reader's Digest Version" (Wim Wenders' term). Songs heard for 10 seconds originally are now presented in their full glory, including a previously deleted version of Elvis Costello's "Days" performed by Solveig Dommartin, Chick Ortega, Ernie Dingo, Charlie McMahon, and David Gulpilil.

    According to the director, this version will be released on DVD in Europe in 2001, and possibly in the USA before 2002. I hope everyone can have a chance to see the complete, non-mutilated version of this wonderful movie!
    9marcus-175

    A difficult film at first, but so is all good literature

    The vast majority of people I know have never understood this film. Probably this is because the 2.5 hour running time of the original release is actually vastly too short for the story. The director's cut is a whopping 4.5 hours, but goes by so quickly one hardly notices. If you are bored, then you probably haven't figured out what's really going on. Some notes:

    This is a story of trials, of how our relationships to each other, and to humanity and the Earth, are shaped and impeded by technology. It is a fearful story of the dangers of our world as Wenders saw them in almost 20 years ago now. The journey is central here (as it is in almost all epic works) and the story doesn't work without seeing that journey unfold first all over the earth (and no, it wasn't about sponsoring nations--the journey of Sam and Claire et al reenacts other journeys only alluded to in the film, bringing up themes of connectedness to family and place.)

    To me the most important theme in this film is the power of the journey and of stories to transform us--a theme so old we may be tired of it, though it remains relevant today. Eugene (Neill) is to me the central character, and any good viewing of the movie depends on understanding how he fits in as more than a side character caught up in a great chase.

    One last note: this doesn't deserve to be described as Sci-Fi. Yes, there's some science-like imagery in it, but the thrust of the movie is literary. The "science-fiction" in the movie serves only as an extension of the transformations and journeys of the characters. It turns those things inward rather than outward, and succeeds well in doing it. A truly remarkable and excellent film that got a bad first screening because no distributor had the guts to put out a 5 hour movie. (What would they say to Akira Kurosawa these days?)
    7loganx-2

    Seeing The World For The First And Last Time

    Wim Wenders over 5 hour globetrecking cyberpunk epic, is intended to be the ultimate road movie. It plays out like a miniseries, about a woman who just separated from her writer boyfriend(played by Sam Niel who serves as narrator), and crashes cars with wounded bank-robbers, they offer to give her some of the money if she will transport the cash the rest of the way to Paris for them. She agrees and uses her money to finance the trip that ensues for the rest of the movie. She immediately after meets William Hurt, a mysterious hitchhiker she becomes fascinated with. He is on the lamb, but from who, and why? After he ditches her and steals a hefty sum she becomes obsessed with finding him.

    All the while a rouge Indian nuclear satellite hovers above the Earth, haywire and endangering a possible nuclear Apocalypse if it accidentally detonates. The world is closer to ending than it has ever been, which means its just a story on the news in the background, most people try to ignore.

    The first segment, in this three part film, is their chase cross country and continent, "A Dance Around The World", as the book about their lives is latter called.

    They begin in Italy, and go on to Paris, Berlin, Moscow, Bejing, Tokyo, San Francisco, and finally the Australlian Outback, our heroin Miriam discovers, that Hurt is wanted for a stolen piece of Government property, a device that records the experience of seeing and translates the information as images. He is recording the most beautiful places in the world, for his blind mother. He is the son of Max Von Sydow, the inventor of the device. Their cat and mouse game becomes a whirlwind romance of constant movement and escape.

    By the third segment they reach Sydow's underground lab in Australlia, where they also discover that the device cannot only record seeing for the blind, but can record dreams if left on during sleep. The aboriginals who run the lab with Sydow refuse to work on his dream machine. Slowly but believably the rest of the staff, becomes obsessed with staring into the recordings of their dreams, "It got to the point where they dreamed of their dreams...and fell ever deeper into the black well of Narcissus .".

    There are car crashes, planes losing power midlight, and one gorgeous locale after another. Like "Alphaville" and "The Fall" this film is completely indebted to its beautiful sights, that it finds and photographs. At five hours long, you can imagine it meanders a good deal. And it does, but for a film so dedicated to the pure spectacle and profound importance and danger of "seeing things", I didn't mind.

    Future content wise, there is a clear opposition between the dual natures of the machine, helping the blind to see the world, and allowing the sightful to intrude upon their private internal world, whose appeal is magnetic and addictive. Tecnhology is a double edged sword, amazing but not without its serious ethical and philosophical dilemmas (which is the more real world the one within or without? etc), this movie doesn't delve into it conversation wise, it's lets everything play out, at five hours it gives you the credit that you can work it out for yourself.

    It's really just a beautiful film to watch, that's much sweeter and gentler than most sci-fi, and more fascinating too because it doesn't shove its implications down your throat.

    Wim Wenders, got people like The Talking Heads, Can, Lou Reed, Patti Smith, Elvis Costello, U2, Nick Cave, and many many more, to make original songs for the soundtrack about the new millennium. While many of the songs are very good, most are awkwardly placed as well. No doubt Wenders was really excited about all the music and just wanted to use everything.

    Definitely flawed, but a richly excessive and eccentric experiments and time capsule. Despite its hefty run time, I thought Wenders was sensitive, to the changing dynamics of the future world, it's not dystopian and it's not Star Trek/Fifth Element Space Opera either, it occupies, a space, where simple good or bad, are no longer really relevant to discussion.

    At one point when everyone assumes the world has ended Sam Niel's character is playing in a small band with several Aboriginal neural scientists, a few french-bank robbers, a British bounty hunter, and some random strays who wandered into the Australian compound fearful of nuclear fallout, and they play a music that sounds like Australlian Blue Grass; Didgeridoo's and pianos, harmonica's, and trumpets, blending together to create something singular and new. He notes to himself, "This entire trip has not been about helping a blind woman to see, or gazing into ourselves. But this adventure, the satellite, the machine, the crash, it all occurred, so we could be here, at this moment, to create this music which would have never otherwise existed, right at the crest of the end of the world".

    Few sci-fi films are dedicated to power of music(that the characters play), words(that Sam Neil records for his novel), and images(of coming war, of the beauty of the world, and the contours of our own mind/dream/souls,etc). In Alphaville when the computer asks Lemmy Caution, "What moves the night?", Caution responds, point blank, "Poetry". Wim Wenders updates, upgrades, and extends this concept for the new millennium. Though I cant remember too much of what was said, I'm still humming along days later, with some pretty pictures circulating in my head like post cards from an alternate universe.

    It's a bittersweet, love, travelogue, adventure story, for the New Millennium; "Where In The Wolrd Is Carmen San Diego?", as written by William Gibson on a sentimental day.
    HeyAtticus

    A Movie With A Clear View of the World

    I agree with the comments made earlier concerning the denouement but that's only a disappointment if you look at the movie literally instead of figuratively. As in his other movies like Paris, Texas, the backdrops become another character in the film. Just like the title entails, Wenders was challenged to get the WHOLE world into his movie. He has succeeded. At the end of "The End of The World", we finally see it as we should all see the Earth.

    The characters represent different ideologies of the different countries they're from and Wenders uses this to develop the plot.

    These "countries" are trying to seize control of one man's vision and a source of power. However, they soon find out that not one of them can control the outcome of the movie.

    The movie is Wender's commentary on global politics and socioeconomics. He portrays the world in a flurry of action from a European car chase to a U.S.A in recession, to a dichotomized Japan, and to an isolated Australia. It is an accurate depiction of the world we are living in now because that is how the movie was filmed - out in the streets of the real world circa the end of the 20th century which enhances the theme of the movie.

    If you watch this movie you will believe you are living at "The End of the World". The movie is even better NOW then when it first came out. It's been 13 years since the first showing and I'm 28. Being a teenager, the sci-fi, action, fast-pace and the heroine's romance with William Hurt held my attention but to truly appreciate the WHOLE MOVIE you have to get past the juvenile/pop culture themes.

    Being a woman, I identified with the heroine and the way she acts at the end of the movie and I think you will, too. The men will relate to the narrator because they tend to distance themselves from what's really going on in this movie and "cut to the chase". Overall, the movie is good for the whole family to watch except for one nude scene.

    This "summary" took me awhile to write but as I went through the process of analyzing the movie from memory it became easier and easier as the film's key scenes flashed into my head. This only proves how powerful and clear Wenders' vision is as a director.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Wim Wenders' original rough cut for this film was twenty hours long.
    • Patzer
      When several of the European characters leave the Mbantua settlement to take a group photo, believing the adventure to be over, the voice-over mentions that it's February, 2000. Yet shortly after, as Henry Farber is trying a new series of experiments on recording dream imagery, a computer display for the current experiment shows January 21.
    • Zitate

      Eugene Fitzpatrick: [voice over] Soon they were hooked; all of them. They lived to see their dreams, and when they slept they dreamed about their dreams. They had arrived at the island of dreams together; but in a short time they were oceans apart. I watched helplessly as Claire and Sam were drowning in their own nocturnal imagery. They ignored each other, and neglected themselves. The dreams which should have been flushed away with the first yawn, were now their only diet; and thus became more and more concentrated. They made monsters for themselves that they could neither tolerate nor do without... They wandered in and out of lost worlds. Feelings and figures emerged from a forgotten past. Their dreams became black holes of isolation... They suffered, finally; from a complete loss of reality.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The film exists in four separate versions. The first is the significantly cut American 158-minute version released by Warner Bros. in theaters, and on VHS, LaserDisc, and some streaming platforms. Wenders has disparagingly referred this cut as the 'reader's digest version'. The second is a 179-minute cut that existed only on Japanese LaserDisc. The third is Wim Wenders' director's cut, which runs 300 minutes. This cut significantly expands scenes, motivates Claire's romantic involvement with Sam Farber and keeps it from seeming less frivolous and more the expression of a wounded heart, additional scenes in Japan, and in San Francisco with Allen Garfield as an evil car salesman (a take-off on his character in another Wenders film), and numerous other expansions/additions. This full-length version divided the film into three parts, all given episode names, and all with opening credits because it was originally intended for this version to be shown as three separate films, or as a mini-series. This 300-minute cut was only available on DVD in Germany, Italy and France. It was screened several times over the years in America and the UK: the National Film Theatre in London on Saturday 2nd July 1994, December 6, 1996 at the University of Washington, with director Wim Wenders attending, Jan. 14, 2001 at the American Cinematheque (with Wenders attending), February 24, 2001 at the Directors Guild of America Theater with Wenders announcing the film would be released on DVD.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Memo to the Academy - 1992 (1992)
    • Soundtracks
      Opening Titles
      Written by Graeme Revell

      Performed by David Darling (cello solo)

      Courtesy of Trans Glide Music BMI

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 12. September 1991 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Deutschland
      • Frankreich
      • Australien
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Criterion Channel
      • Criterion Collection
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
      • Italienisch
      • Japanisch
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Hasta el fin del mundo
    • Drehorte
      • Tosca Cafe - 242 Columbus Avenue, North Beach, San Francisco, Kalifornien, USA(Claire meets Sam again)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Argos Films
      • Road Movies Filmproduktion
      • Village Roadshow Pictures
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 23.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 829.625 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 38.553 $
      • 29. Dez. 1991
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 829.625 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      4 Stunden 47 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.66 : 1

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