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Der Tintenfisch und der Wal

Originaltitel: The Squid and the Whale
  • 2005
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 21 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
93.554
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Jeff Daniels, Laura Linney, Jesse Eisenberg, and Owen Kline in Der Tintenfisch und der Wal (2005)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
trailer wiedergeben2:25
4 Videos
99+ Fotos
Coming-of-AgeComedyDrama

Folgt zwei Jungen, die sich in den 1980er Jahren mit der Scheidung ihrer Eltern in Brooklyn befassten.Folgt zwei Jungen, die sich in den 1980er Jahren mit der Scheidung ihrer Eltern in Brooklyn befassten.Folgt zwei Jungen, die sich in den 1980er Jahren mit der Scheidung ihrer Eltern in Brooklyn befassten.

  • Regie
    • Noah Baumbach
  • Drehbuch
    • Noah Baumbach
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Owen Kline
    • Jeff Daniels
    • Laura Linney
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    93.554
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Noah Baumbach
    • Drehbuch
      • Noah Baumbach
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Owen Kline
      • Jeff Daniels
      • Laura Linney
    • 297Benutzerrezensionen
    • 99Kritische Rezensionen
    • 82Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 23 Gewinne & 49 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos4

    The Squid and the Whale
    Trailer 2:25
    The Squid and the Whale
    The Squid and the Whale
    Trailer 2:30
    The Squid and the Whale
    The Squid and the Whale
    Trailer 2:30
    The Squid and the Whale
    The Squid and the Whale
    Trailer 2:25
    The Squid and the Whale
    The Squid And The Whale: Tennis
    Clip 1:11
    The Squid And The Whale: Tennis

    Fotos107

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    Topbesetzung45

    Ändern
    Owen Kline
    Owen Kline
    • Frank Berkman
    Jeff Daniels
    Jeff Daniels
    • Bernard Berkman
    Laura Linney
    Laura Linney
    • Joan Berkman
    Jesse Eisenberg
    Jesse Eisenberg
    • Walt Berkman
    William Baldwin
    William Baldwin
    • Ivan
    David Benger
    David Benger
    • Carl
    Anna Paquin
    Anna Paquin
    • Lili
    Molly Barton
    • Graduate Student
    Bo Berkman
    • Graduate Student
    Matthew Kaplan
    • Graduate Student
    Simon Kaplan
    • Graduate Student
    Matthew Kirsch
    • Graduate Student
    Daniella Markowicz
    • Graduate Student
    Elizabeth Meriwether
    Elizabeth Meriwether
    • Graduate Student
    Ben Schrank
    • Graduate Student
    Amy Srebnick
    • Graduate Student
    Josh Srebnick
    • Graduate Student
    Emma Straub
    • Graduate Student
    • Regie
      • Noah Baumbach
    • Drehbuch
      • Noah Baumbach
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen297

    7,393.5K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8mkillian

    Well Drawn Characters

    It's interesting to read all of the comments and how each reviewer has found something unique that calls to them. Some reviewers have focused on the boys or the father or the mother. Different scenes have been noted, almost none by more than one reviewer. What this tells me is that the writer/director has crafted a story in which all of the scenes contribute to the whole. This was my experience watching the movie. It was believable, well shot, great backgrounds, all in all a treat for anyone who loves movies and can handle some pretty raw dialog/situations.....and nothing gets blown up.

    I would recommend this only for adults or a very mature teenager. The language and situations are tough but as I said, very believable. I identified with much of what the teens in this movie are going through and my sympathies definitely sided with them against their self-involved and self-indulgent parents. This is the best role I've ever seen Jeff Daniels in and having known men in my life like his character I think he was spot-on with his portrayal. There were no weak characterizations with any of the actors, for that matter.
    8evanston_dad

    Moral of the Story: Divorce Is Tough

    A friend of mine was hesitant to see this movie, because she'd heard that it pushes the agenda that divorce is never a good option for dealing with marital problems. I don't really know who told her this, and I hope this same reason isn't keeping others from seeing it. This isn't at all what I took away from the film. It certainly communicates the idea that divorce isn't easy, on either the parents or the kids, but I don't feel that it pronounces judgement on those who turn to it as an option.

    "The Squid and the Whale" is a sad--though at times very funny--look at what divorce does to one family in 1986 New York. Jeff Daniels plays the dad, a pompous, arrogant writer whose feelings of commercial failure (he teaches literature at a university) cause him to act intellectually superior to everyone he meets. Daniels is almost too good in this role; he reminded me way too much of people I actually know who are like this. He's the kind of guy who would be deadly at a dinner party, because there's no such thing as a casual or flippant remark in this guy's presence. He analyzes everything to death, and isn't content until everyone's opinion matches his own.

    Laura Linney plays the wayward mom, blamed for the break up of the marriage by the dad because of a string of affairs she carries on. Her guilt keeps her from being able to discipline her sons, especially the oldest, who treats her horribly. Linney's role is smaller but in some ways much more complex than Daniels'. Her character has to take responsibility for her infidelity but still make the audience sympathize with her.

    Caught in the middle of this mess are their two boys. The oldest quickly allies himself with his dad, and walks around regurgitating his father's opinions on every subject, rarely pausing to form any of his own. The younger son, more sensitive and tired of being intellectually brow beaten by his father and older brother, sticks closer to the mom. No one is totally to blame, yet no one is completely innocent either in this honest and frank film.

    Noah Baumbach has made no secret of the fact that it is based on his own adolescent life, and it has that confessional feeling that movies in this genre frequently do. There are awkward moments when this doesn't totally work. The ending for one is rather ham-fisted, and a scene between the oldest son and his school therapist seemed awfully pat to me. But the acting and the sharp writing make up for these weaknesses, and the movie manages to be poignant without ever becoming maudlin or overly sentimental.

    See it for the performances of Linney and especially Daniels, who has been proving his versatility as an actor over the last few years.

    Grade: A-
    8thewalrus8

    Brilliant and Awkward and Everything in Between

    Not being a child from a product of divorce, after seeing this movie I can appreciate the push and pull that manifests from divorce. Now, I am positive that not all broken homes are this broken, but Noah Baumbauch creates an environment that makes you squirm and want to cry all at the same time. All of the performances are near perfection and are executed with utmost conviction. I find that Jeff Daniels is one of those actors who get better with every movie he does. He is completely unlikeable in this movie yet you feel for him and you want him to get it together. Very few actors can play a prick and yet you are rooting for him and there are a few points in the film where you even buy into his bullshit as much as his oldest son (played by Jesse Eisenberg) does. The Squid and The Whale is not the most uplifting of fare, but it is a must view for anybody who appreciates film, not movies, film.
    8rooprect

    I've never been so interested in people I don't care about

    The opening scene hits us with a bunch of characters who are so unlikeable that you may wonder what's the point in watching their lives for 81 minutes. In hindsight, and after watching the DVD interview with writer/director Noah Baumbach, I'm sure this was deliberate. By disliking (or rather disconnecting from) the characters at the outset, the audience can take a more objective, emotionless view of this dysfunctional family--much the same way the family approaches itself.

    So don't expect many weepy scenes where you say to yourself, "I feel exactly like that character!" Because unless you're an egotistical snob of a father who ironically swears like a common sailor at his kids, or unless you're the cluelessly devoted son who parrots everything the father says, or the passive-aggressive mother who has affairs rather than confront her marital problems, or the younger son who seems pretty cool until he inexplicably starts doing disgusting things in the library (and I mean disgusting!), then I don't think you'll immediately associate with any character in the film. Not the way you might in a standard Hollywood crowd pleaser.

    If you can make it past that, "The Squid and the Whale" becomes a thoroughly engaging, entertaining, and at times funny experience. It kept me riveted from start to finish, and I found myself wishing it had been longer.

    A word about the humor: don't expect any big gags. In fact, in the interview Noah talks about how he had to tell the actors *not* to read their lines as if they're funny. He didn't intend it to be a comedy, but still (owing largely to the fantastic deadpan performances by Jeff Daniels & Jesse Eisenberg) you might find yourself cracking up at how plain bizarre everything is. Jeff Daniels (the father) in particular plays such a satirical caricature of a horrible parent that there's no other way to interpret his character than: a clown.

    Something that has to be mentioned is the setting & time period of this film. Brooklyn 1986. Although I'm not a Brooklynite, I can speak as an 80s kid who loved all the minor references... clothes, hairstyles, Burger King collectible glasses at the dinner table, and the music! They picked a few gems I probably haven't heard since '86. All of this adds tremendous authenticity to the story and takes you on a sort of fantasy ride. It's hard to believe they got 21st century Brooklyn to look like 1986 on a small indie budget of $1.5 million, but I thought it was flawless.

    On a filmmaking level, I noticed some cute nods to the French New Wave school of film (handheld cameras swinging back & forth for jarring effect à la "Jules & Jim" by Truffaut) and a general Godard-ish, brooding vibe to the whole presentation while not afraid to show bright, vibrant scenes. Whether or not you're a fan of New Wave, if you like unconventional camera work you'll probably get a kick out of Noah's approach.

    Film I would compare this to are the excellent "City Island" which is on the lighter side, "The Savages" which is on the darker side, and "The Beaver" which is on the mildly psychotic side. Don't hesitate to see any one of them if you get the chance.
    7noralee

    Not a Date Movie: A Lacerating Look at the Impact of Divorce on Adolescent Sons

    "The Squid and the Whale" is such a corrosive look at marriage and child rearing that it could inspire a backlash among parents to ban arts education, if not literacy altogether, from the schools in order to prevent their children from revenging upon them as much as writer/director Noah Baumbach does on his family, notwithstanding the usual closing disclaimer of fiction.

    Almost as raw as the old PBS documentary series "An American Family," it is such a savage look at divorce that it could also be used to discourage people from getting married in the first place, let alone having kids or considering moving to a kibbutz where the kids would be raised communally. Evidently it was cathartic for Baumbach as he did get married when the film was completed (and his now spouse is thanked in the credits).

    Produced by Wes Anderson, it seems like the nonfiction inspiration for "The Royal Tenenbaums," with urban, urbane siblings who aspire to be a writer and a tennis pro. The tennis, and ping pong, images repeat continuously throughout as the kids are bounced back and forth between the parents in a very negative portrayal of competitive joint custody, where even a parent moving close by is torture - "The other side of the park - is that even in Brooklyn?", vividly demonstrating how small a kid's world is.

    Baumbach has clearly studied Woody Allen movies, also in smoothly incorporating very funny lines, and he uses Brooklyn, specifically the Park Slope neighborhood, like Allen uses Manhattan, street by street, subway stop by subway stop, though this surely will reinforce every prejudice the rest of the country has against raising kids in the city. I doubt out-of-towners will understand the karmic significances of looking for and finding a parking space. The final scenes in Manhattan seem an intentionally cathartic solution as in "Saturday Night Fever."

    Jeff Daniels plays an even more obnoxious father as writer than Jeff Bridges in "The Door in the Floor" (ironically, as Daniels says he's frequently mistaken for Bridges by fans). He is frighteningly judgmental, hypercritical, selfish, competitive and all around emotional abuser, and out and out neglectful, though I'm not sure Oprah would do a show about this kind of abuse. He has absolutely no sense of appropriate boundaries between his pre-adolescent/adolescent sons and himself, and involves them in way too adult views that damage how they can be age appropriate. (Though it is a bit too arch to have his writing career be on the skids while his wife's begins to flourish.)

    This is one of the few films about kids I've seen lately where the use of profanity is appropriately shocking as in this hyper articulate family it is emblematic of the family's break down in communication as the kids blithely parrot what they hear at home without understanding much of what they are talking about.

    The younger generation handles scabrous lines of detailed dialog magnificently. Jesse Eisenberg had to endure similarly nasty lessons about male-female relationships in "Roger Dodger" and takes it a step further here. Owen Kline, Kevin's talented son, handles with aplomb scenes that reveal quite more about pre-adolescent boys than most females, even their mothers, may comfortably want to explicitly know goes on. The lacerating men and women of "Closer" at least didn't have kids and in "We Don't Live Here Anymore" (with another tempted college professor) the kids were fairly obliviously very young. This film very clearly illuminates how brutal deteriorating parental relationships are on older children, particularly in how they relate to the opposite sex. I assume we're supposed to feel positive at the end that the kids' cries for help are finally being heard, but I'm not sure the parents have grown or changed.

    The other kids in smaller parts are also very natural. Laura Linney's beauty is downplayed for some reason. She doesn't usually get to be maternal in films and she shows that warmth in lovely ways here. I'm pretty sure William Baldwin's character is intended to be both bland and annoying. Anna Paquin doesn't get much to work with as the usual student temptress in the plot, though she brings a certain ditsy cheerfulness to the role.

    The music is wonderful, including a score by Britta Phillips and Dean Wareham of Luna. A Loudon Wainwright song, who has written extensively of similar father/son issues, closes over the credits. Pink Floyd figures in the plot and it is a bit hard to believe that the parents of Park Slope in 1985 were not familiar with Roger Waters.

    This is not a date movie -- unless you want to break up with the person afterwards or tell your spouse you want a divorce or tell your significant other you definitely never want to have kids.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      According to director Noah Baumbach, Jesse Eisenberg auditioned 9 times for the part of Walt.
    • Patzer
      Frank complains that the writing desk Bernard got for him is for a lefty. Frank is clearly a lefty, as evidenced in his eating, drinking, tennis and ping-pong play.
    • Zitate

      Bernard Berkman: How do you know they were both Frank's?

      Ms. Lemon: Well, I suppose it's possible other kids are masturbating and spreading their semen around the school as well... It's possible, but, uh, somewhat unlikely.

      Bernard Berkman: Oh, it happens, I'm sure, much more than we know.

      Joan Berkman: Bernard, have you ever done anything like this?

      Bernard Berkman: I'm not going to answer that.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in The 63rd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2006 (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Hey You
      Written by Roger Waters

      Performed by Pink Floyd

      Courtesy of EMI Records

      Under license from EMI Film & Television Music

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 11. Mai 2006 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Historias de familia
    • Drehorte
      • Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA(location)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Samuel Goldwyn Films
      • Sony Pictures International
      • Destination Films
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 1.500.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 7.372.734 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 129.844 $
      • 9. Okt. 2005
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 11.098.131 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 21 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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