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Todestraum - Der letzte Zeuge schweigt

Originaltitel: Liebestraum
  • 1991
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 52 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
1729
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Todestraum - Der letzte Zeuge schweigt (1991)
Home Video Trailer from MGM Home Entertainment
trailer wiedergeben1:43
1 Video
13 Fotos
MysteryThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe successful writer and professor of architecture Nick Kaminsky returns from New York to Elderstown to visit his biological mother Lillian Anderson Munnsen that is terminal. Nick does not ... Alles lesenThe successful writer and professor of architecture Nick Kaminsky returns from New York to Elderstown to visit his biological mother Lillian Anderson Munnsen that is terminal. Nick does not know Lilian since he was adopted when he was a child but he pays the bill for her to stay ... Alles lesenThe successful writer and professor of architecture Nick Kaminsky returns from New York to Elderstown to visit his biological mother Lillian Anderson Munnsen that is terminal. Nick does not know Lilian since he was adopted when he was a child but he pays the bill for her to stay in a private room in the hospital. While walking on the street, Nick stumbles upon his for... Alles lesen

  • Regie
    • Mike Figgis
  • Drehbuch
    • Mike Figgis
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kevin Anderson
    • Bill Pullman
    • Kim Novak
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,8/10
    1729
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Mike Figgis
    • Drehbuch
      • Mike Figgis
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kevin Anderson
      • Bill Pullman
      • Kim Novak
    • 31Benutzerrezensionen
    • 22Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Liebestraum
    Trailer 1:43
    Liebestraum

    Fotos13

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    Topbesetzung36

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    Kevin Anderson
    Kevin Anderson
    • Nick Kaminsky
    Bill Pullman
    Bill Pullman
    • Paul Kessler
    Kim Novak
    Kim Novak
    • Lillian Anderson Munnsen
    Pamela Gidley
    Pamela Gidley
    • Jane Kessler
    Graham Beckel
    Graham Beckel
    • Sheriff Pete Ricker
    Zach Grenier
    Zach Grenier
    • Barnard Ralston IV
    Thomas Kopache
    Thomas Kopache
    • Dr. Parker
    Anne Lange
    Anne Lange
    • Nurse #1
    Jack Wallace
    Jack Wallace
    • Mike
    Max Perlich
    Max Perlich
    • Orderly #1
    Catherine Hicks
    Catherine Hicks
    • Mary Parker
    Taina Elg
    Taina Elg
    • Old Mother Ralston
    Tom McDermott
    Tom McDermott
    • Night Porter
    Joseph McKenna
    Joseph McKenna
    • Day Clerk
    Hugh Hurd
    Hugh Hurd
    • Orderly #2
    Joe Aufiery
    • Buddy
    Harper Harris
    • Nurse #2
    Karen Sillas
    Karen Sillas
    • Nurse #3
    • Regie
      • Mike Figgis
    • Drehbuch
      • Mike Figgis
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen31

    5,81.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    tom_korff

    Better than the comments give it credit for

    Some of the comments here on this movie seem to point in the direction that people simply don't seem to be able to grasp the subtle implications of this movie. The movie consists of two intertwined stories, one in the past and one in the present, and until the very end, the story of the present is a direct repetition of the story of the past, only in a different setting. And some of the people from the story of the past are still alive and present in the story of the present.

    Most importantly, Bill Pullmans character, Paul Kessler, plays the repetition-role of the angry husband, who one generation ago killed his wife and her lover. Only Paul Kessler doesn't (yet) have an adulterous wife to kill, so his hate and anger is pointed at the building, in which the past act of hatred took place. Paul Kessler is the engine that drives the repetition-pattern in the present of past events, and the two main characters, Nick Kaminsky and Pauls wife Jane, can't help but to play their part in repeating history.

    The love- and the hate-stories of the past and the present and their repetitive nature are the drives and motivators of this movie, and everything else evolves and is motivated from this pattern.

    The movie really isn't that subtle, it simply can't be explained by mere deductive logic. It's a love- and hate- and crime- and almost a ghoststory and if you absolutely have to have an explanation for everything in this movie, the explanation would have to be found in the explanation of the present through the past and in the illogical event of the almost complete repetition of the past in the present.
    Francoesque-1

    A forgotten masterpiece

    I first saw a trailer for this on a now defunct late night TV programme back in 1991. It had me hooked from the start with stylish lighting, great music and sharp editing promising a modern noir thriller with shades of "Dead Again". Due to a limited cinema release the first chance I got to see the film was a couple of years later when I saw the box in a video store. I bought it immediately, figuring it might be interesting. I underestimated. This is a fantastic film filled with emotion and beauty. The first time I saw it it blew me away. I expected a cool little thriller and was rewarded with something much more. This is not a murder mystery or a thriller, per se, but a love story shot through a noir lens. The soundtrack (also by Figgis) is astounding and the acting is perfect. Particular kudos to the then-unknown Bill Pullman who puts in a career best performance. Also, if you actually figure out the central twist of the film (listen to the conversation in the car between Jane and Nick) you will wonder how on earth Figgis got this past a studio. Ever since I first saw it I've been trying to convert my friends to it's wonders with much success. See it now and your life may not be better, but two hours of it will have been well spent. Remember: Only you can prevent forest fires
    walking_bread

    Not quite as good as Dead Again.

    But given that, not a terrible watch. I read a comment about the lighting being special in this film. This really added to my enjoyment. I suppose that Kevin Anderson and his management expected his career to take off, because he did Leibestraum the same year (1991) as "Sleeping With The Enemy" with Julia Roberts, whose career was blossoming. Not that Kevin hasn't hit the big time since then. Who knows. Maybe he has wildly surpassed his personal goals. I enjoy his performances, including the TV thing about a Catholic priest a few years back. For DVD renters, catch the deleted scene. This is the coolest. The ladies at the Cat House, are also the nurses in the hospital. This revelation was the highlight of the film. For that reason, I don't understand why it was left out. There are equally explicit scenes that were left in, and they dovetail with the deleted scene. But, I was not the writer and director of Internal Affairs, successfully released the previous year.
    chaos-rampant

    Dreamlike. Bodies entered by narrative

    I like films that are dreamlike and fluid, floating that wanders outside of the confines of self and story. At the same time I like them to draw fresh water from the well of mysterious non- self that underpins really anything that is exuberantly receptive to the world (passionate sex, dreaming, youth, all a part of it), wipes anxiety and restores our way of seeing to the far-flung horizons teeming with possibility that youth and early lovers know.

    Lynch is a natural master of this deep swimming. Ferrara tried briefly at around the same time. Further back it was Rivette. A lot of film noir works in a similar way for me.

    Here we have all these things; dreamlike in the way that Lynch is, about passion that dives in and perturbs reality, and a cinematic mind-bending swim in the waters. It's nominally a thriller, but written in waters, fluid about anxiety and self.

    It has the noir engine where someone sets out to investigate and finds himself embroiled in mysterious goings-on. In noir that's usually a PI, but it doesn't have to be. Here it's simply a son whose mother has been hospitalized and he arrives to the small town to care for her.

    He an architectural writer, she a photographer, both coming to explore an old building that is set to be demolished, but she has a husband. They unearth a story that took place in that building long ago, about illicit lovers discovered one night. We have some obvious symbolism in the building as obliquely shared past and as wandering through his own mind that is buffeted by anxieties.

    And it has the notion of persisting memory where something that happened in the past is rising up again in the present. The noir drive is that the more he succumbs to passion, the more he is pulled as a narrator into a past story about similar passion.

    So they fall for each other while he's unearthing a narrative of how that shattered lives one day. By investigating further, he comes to understand that he's tied to that story via his parents; his mother has been unwell ever since. There's also another son whose life is intimately woven to events of that night, an eerie figure like out of Lynch who by driving past the building one day causes someone to die.

    It's all eventually made to align during a hospital visit late at night. Another invalid mother is wheeled out, central in events of that story. A metaphysical wiring between bodies takes place, bodies entered it seems by our knowledge of the story. The fateful coupling that upset reality takes place once more inside the building; once more a vengeful spouse is waiting in the shadows with a gun. But they say that they love each other. He's eavesdropping and stays his hand.

    This is worthwhile stuff.

    Noir Meter: 2/4 / Neo-noir or post noir? Post
    6williwaw

    Kim Novak in Sorrowful Mystery

    Kim Novak returned to films in this Mike Figgis film. During the shooting there was a lot of PR generated by the legendary star's return to films including an interview with Kim Novak by the Sunday New York times Movie Section, great advance PR for the film. The back story of this movie would have been a better film than what appears on screen. Ms. Novak fought bitterly with Mike Figgis who threatened to cut Kim Novak's part to shreds, and Figgis did. What resulted is a muddled film that stars Kevin Anderson a fine actor whose part must also have been edited. Ditto Bill Pullman. Liebestraum - a brilliant title- makes little sense as a film.

    Liebestraum started out as a Warner Bros film but ended up as a MGM film and that once fabled studio was going thru one of its periodic slumps and financial distresses and gave this film a very very limited opening in only two cities Los Angeles and New York. The New York Times favorably reviewed Ms. Novak in its review which should have given MGM and Figgis to open the picture more widely. The mystery here is not the film's murky subject but the fact that Kim Novak a worldwide star and a very under appreciated actress was given so little to do but moan. Novak is seen basically bed ridden and moaning during the film until a shocking windup.

    In a purely business observation, Kim Novak was at one time a huge box office draw with films such as Vertigo, Picnic, Bell Book and Candle, Pal Joey, Strangers When We Meet, The Mirror Crack'd et al and MGM and Figgis should have sold this as a Kim Novak return project and they would have made their money back on that. Instead, Kim Novak was ignored by Figgis who in turn ignored this film refusing to do any PR for the project upon its release and sadly this film ended the film career of Kim Novak.

    Madonna was supposed to do the female lead but told her then beau Warren Beatty she did not understand the script. Beatty wisely told Madonna if she did not understand the project do not do it. Pam Gidley stepped in to replace Madonna. Wise move on Madonna's part.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      As of 26/05/2023 this is Kim Novak's last movie.
    • Zitate

      Lillian Anderson Munnsen: [Speaking to her son from a hospital bed] He was so handsome. One night, he came in very late. I was carrying you. I was still awake. He tiptoed in real quiet, so as not to disturb me. So I didn't let on. He slipped into bed, and was asleep in minutes. His hand was there on the pillow, between us. I gently took it, and I began to kiss the fingers. One by one. And I could smell cunt on them...

    • Alternative Versionen
      Director's cut is unrated and contains several minutes of additional footage. This version is available in VHS format.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: 29th Street/Highlander 2: The Quickening/Billy Bathgate/Year of the Gun (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Liebestraum
      Written by Franz Liszt

      Performed by Earl Bostic and His Orchestra

      Courtesy of Highland Music, Inc.

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Liebestraum?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • November 1991 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Liebestraum
    • Drehorte
      • Binghamton, New York, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Initial Entertainment Group (IEG)
      • Pathé Entertainment
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 6.900.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 133.645 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 133.645 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 52 Min.(112 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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