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Robinson Crusoe

Originaltitel: Les aventures de Robinson Crusoë
  • Fernsehserie
  • 1964
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 25 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,1/10
366
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Robinson Crusoe (1964)
Adventure

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter shipwreck, Robinson Crusoe survives alone on island, building shelter, reminiscing about past. With wildlife as company, months pass. One day he discovers footprint, making him wonder ... Alles lesenAfter shipwreck, Robinson Crusoe survives alone on island, building shelter, reminiscing about past. With wildlife as company, months pass. One day he discovers footprint, making him wonder if he's still alone.After shipwreck, Robinson Crusoe survives alone on island, building shelter, reminiscing about past. With wildlife as company, months pass. One day he discovers footprint, making him wonder if he's still alone.

  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Robert Hoffmann
    • Fabian Cevallos
    • Erich Bludau
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,1/10
    366
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Robert Hoffmann
      • Fabian Cevallos
      • Erich Bludau
    • 9Benutzerrezensionen
    • 2Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Episoden4

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    HöchsteAm besten bewertet1 Jahreszeit1964

    Fotos7

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    Topbesetzung21

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    Robert Hoffmann
    Robert Hoffmann
    • Robinson 'Robby' Crusoe
    • 1964
    Fabian Cevallos
    • 'Freitag'…
    • 1964
    Erich Bludau
    • Mr. Crusoe (Kreutznaer)
    • 1964
    Oskar von Schab
    • Jeremias B. Wooseley
    • 1964
    Claudia Berg
    • Wooseleys Nichte
    • 1964
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Kapitän Darrik
    • 1964
    Robert Luchaire
    • Airkins
    • 1964
    Jacques Dynam
    Jacques Dynam
    • Bush
    • 1964
    Alain Nobis
    • Le notaire
    Michael Chevalier
    • Robinson 'Robby' Crusoe
    • 1964
    Lee Payant
    • Robinson 'Robby' Crusoe
    • 1964
    Jane Marken
    Jane Marken
    • Jenny
    • 1964
    Paul Chevalier
    • Blinder
    • 1964
    Konrad Wagner
    • Kapitän Darrik
    • 1964
    Arnold Marquis
    Arnold Marquis
    • Airkins…
    • 1964
    Curt Ackermann
    • Mr. Crusoe (Kreutznaer)
    • 1964
    Gilbert Robin
    • Kapitän der 'Hunter'
    • 1964
    Jean-Paul Bernard
    • Aga Asan (Emir)
    • 1964
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen9

    8,1366
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9tonyjackie

    Nostalgic but still an excellent series

    I have just had the chance to watch this series again after very many years and I was genuinely surprised at how well it has stood the test of time.I expected it to be corny and if I am totally honest,I really thought that I would give up on it early on as it didn't live up to the memory I had of it as a young lad.I am glad that the series proved me wrong.

    I won't drone on about the story as I guess that you all know it so well.What I will mention is that the production values stand up very well indeed and the story races along, although it does drag at times when Robinson is looking back on his life.The series really comes into it's own when Robinson meets up with Friday,although it is late in the series when this happens.One thing that I will say is that you do wish that it was in colour as the locations look fabulous.

    As the lead actor,Robert Hoffmann is impossibly handsome and suits the role very well.It is a bit of a surprise that he didn't become a major star after this.Friday is played with great charm by the actor who's name escapes me.I will give nothing away but although the series was aimed at the children's market there is plenty here for adults to enjoy.OK,so there are some flaws along the way including the most inept bunch of pirate's you will ever see in the last episode,but on the whole it is so well made that you can forgive any little niggles you may have.

    I must say that in the penultimate episode there are scenes that will break even the most hard of hearts and they are done with much skill and dare I say it very well acted throughout.No words are needed,the actions and looks of the actor's say it all.The narration by Lee Payant fits the bill also.

    This was a very pleasant surprise to me after all these years and it is a series that I could definitely sit through again.
    9Jumbajookiba

    Happy days are here again!

    The summers of the late 60's and early 70's when I was a little girl always seemed so much nicer than now and I have often wondered was it just childish optimism that makes me remember them with such affection. It was this affection that made me buy this almost iconic memory of that time, although I was fearful it would not be as I remembered it. I was so wrong, in fact, Robinson Crusoe turned out to be much better that I recalled. I instantly remembered the opening titles, short and sweet, but, I hadn't appreciated how well the story was told; plain,simple and extremely maturely for a children's programme, they understood that children wanted intelligent viewing in those days, so much different to the bubblegum for the eye served up today. Robert Hoffmann is superb as Crusoe and I admit I didn't think of him as eye candy as a 10 year old, but, grown up me appreciates that aspect a lot more. The narration of Lee Payant is perfection and the rest of the cast all add up to great television viewing. I have seen comments about the quality of the print, it isn't that bad although the sound could have done with some cleaning up of the background artifacts, but, I'm not complaining, I'm just glad to have the opportunity to enjoy this wonderful series again. Sadly many kids today will not appreciate this series if it were shown again and that is their loss.
    FilmFlaneur

    Memorable TV version of a classic novel

    In the mid-sixties, in the UK at least, a memorable part of children's evening television was this adaption of Defoe's famous novel, spread over 12 x 25 minute episodes. Shot mainly on location in the Canary Islands,‘Robinson Crusoe' boasts fine location work and evocative camera work and, for many, it remains the definitive version for the small screen.

    The first episode of the series deals with Crusoe's shipwreck and initial landing on his island. Flashbacks within this and the other first few episodes bring his story up to date, as he recalls his restless youth, then his apprenticeship as a law clerk, his running away, his capture into slavery, his adventures as a plantation owner and so on. This is a neat way of incorporating the progress of the original novel. Then his solitude is broken with the arrival of his companion, man Friday, and their relationship grows. So structurally the series divides into four: shipwreck and arrival; the establishment of Crusoe and his cave home, initially with flashbacks; the rescue and education of Friday then, a brief epilogue, with the two of them writing his story back in England. This last section, with the first shipwreck, neatly ‘book ends' the main action. But what really binds all 12 episodes is the overwhelming presence of Crusoe, as narrator `author' of his own story, whose easy-going charm and inquisitiveness is an ideal embodiment of youthful ambition.

    Crusoe's sojourn on his unnamed island is an adventure. But it is also an education, forced on him by circumstance. In his youth he is restless, `a rash young man, full of arrogance'. He disagrees with his father about the path his life should take (a dissatisfaction which eventually leads him to leave home). He prefers fencing to a settled career and wants travel, variety and excitement. By the end of his ordeal, he has achieved inner peace and enlightenment before returning to civilisation with regret, `full of peace and fulfillment' as he puts it. His belated recognition that Friday is human, with feelings too, his stable regard for one place (the island), these are signs of an emotional maturity - something conspicuously missing in his earlier years.

    When away from his island Crusoe is normally restless, itching to start or to continue his adventuring. On his island, when this process is denied him, his thoughts are forced into different channels. He is forced to use his native skills to fashion his environment to survive. His painstaking and detailed attempts at self-sufficiency have an immediacy in presentation which still impresses today. Albicoco's cinematography echoes this development, being full of detail and atmosphere, and the scenes shot of Crusoe working with different materials have a peculiarly tactile nature. The hewing out of his canoe, building a chair, outfitting his cave, stripping the wreck … each process wears a concern with texture, surface, light and shade that is, for want of a better word, beautiful. The black and white photography, the sand, the sunshine, the natural work materials, as well as Crusoe's own glistening body combine to create a sensual surface, amplified by the haunting score.

    Crusoe's own values are straightforward: he wants to remain sane, a Christian, to make the best of it through the best use of his resources, and survive long enough to be rescued. Along the way he has a few interesting observations to make on life, normally whimsical and predicated around nationalistic lines. The English, he suggests, enjoy their privacy (an irony apparently lost on him), or as a race are not normally associated with cooking skills. These opinions are by-the-by. As in many ways, Friday provides the moral crux of the book, so it proves of this adaption.

    For Crusoe - whose literal approach to civilisation and godliness is debatable (`Civilisation starts with trousers' he asserts at one point) - Friday's arrival is both a relief and a challenge. As a companion, he alleviates loneliness, but Crusoe's initial treatment of him as a servant rather than an equal is only rectified after Friday ‘sulks' – an profound absence amplified by the simultaneous death of Crusoe's dog. Friday is clean, bright, reliable, and a worthy friend. The absence of any blameworthy attributes (excluding his understandable moment of sloth following Crusoe's bungled moral instruction), makes his assimilation to the ‘English' way of life relatively painless and allows Crusoe's maturity to occur. As one sign of this, the white man loses his vanity and grows a beard. Friday's admission into civilisation also allows a small debate on the virtues of war, gold and religion. What talk there is serves to increase Crusoe's contemplation of the ‘deeper issues' and in our eyes makes of him a less shallow character. The two men's growing relationship also carries implicit homoerotic possibilities but, unsurprisingly, this is never made explicit.

    Curiously, once seen, the English language version of this series is by far the most successful. Whether or not it was commissioned just for the BBC, I don't know, but a comparison with the original French-voiced production is a surprise. The memorable soundtrack is missing from the ‘authentic' series, replaced by one more jazz based and, to these ears, far less evocative. Worse, Crusoe's distinctive voice and diction is that of a different actor. The tenor voice of the Lee Payant's dubbing in the BBC version encapsulates the tone and manner of a intelligent, resilient Englishman. The conversational style of his narration (which occupies almost all of the dialogue outside of the flashbacks and the debates with Friday) perfectly suits Crusoe's character and made his disappointments and introspection charming. The Austrian actor's real voice, for all his dramatic virtues, lapses back into anonymity. Worse, for this boy grown into an adult, Crusoe is no longer a friend to be revisited again and again.
    8tryptych

    The DVD is finally available!

    I have always loved this show, and I think has has been said many times before, anyone who was a 60's child in Britain couldn't have missed this, and whenever the theme came up, it sent tingles up the spine.

    A simple film on a low budget, but with outstanding talents all round, it is well worth finding. The acting and direction really stand out, and the cinematography in black and white only helps to give it that quality edge. It is now confirmed that Network DVD is releasing it on DVD on June 18th 2007 after a very long wait. It is also worth noting that the haunting score is also now available in an expanded CD from Silva Screen. The original soundtrack was in mono, but it seems there was such a demand for this piece, that the composers recently recreated a medley with a full orchestra in stereo, and all those memories come flying back to the long hot summers as a kid.

    Watch it, and I guarantee there won't be a dry eye in the house.
    HellesAlles

    Robinson Crusoe tv series Amazing to see it again

    Having bought the now out of print series of Robinson Crusoe on video and being amazed to take this journey back to 60's childhood I can't work out why the series is not being made more public.Rumours of a dvd have been around for at least 2yrs but nothing forthcoming.The 60's generation can not wait forever !

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    • Wissenswertes
      In the series, the stay on the island lasts 6 years, 2 months and 19 days. In the novel, however, Crusoe remains on the island for about 28 years.
    • Patzer
      Robinson Crusoe says that Anne Bonny was hanged on November 17, 1674. However, Anne Bonny was not born until 1697 or 1698.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Paws, Claws & Videotape (2010)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 3. Oktober 1964 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Frankreich
      • Westdeutschland
    • Sprachen
      • Spanisch
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Franco London Films
      • Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française (ORTF)
      • Teledis
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 25 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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