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A Single Man

  • 2009
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 39 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,5/10
120.446
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
2.935
368
Colin Firth and Julianne Moore in A Single Man (2009)
Footage from A Single Man's UK Premiere
trailer wiedergeben3:45
13 Videos
99+ Fotos
Period DramaDramaRomanceThriller

Ein englischer Professor kann in den 1960er Jahren in Los Angeles nach dem plötzlichen Tod seines Partners seinen Alltag nicht mehr bewältigen.Ein englischer Professor kann in den 1960er Jahren in Los Angeles nach dem plötzlichen Tod seines Partners seinen Alltag nicht mehr bewältigen.Ein englischer Professor kann in den 1960er Jahren in Los Angeles nach dem plötzlichen Tod seines Partners seinen Alltag nicht mehr bewältigen.

  • Regie
    • Tom Ford
  • Drehbuch
    • Christopher Isherwood
    • Tom Ford
    • David Scearce
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Colin Firth
    • Julianne Moore
    • Matthew Goode
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,5/10
    120.446
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    2.935
    368
    • Regie
      • Tom Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Christopher Isherwood
      • Tom Ford
      • David Scearce
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Colin Firth
      • Julianne Moore
      • Matthew Goode
    • 319Benutzerrezensionen
    • 273Kritische Rezensionen
    • 77Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 39 Gewinne & 59 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos13

    A Single Man's UK Premiere
    Trailer 3:45
    A Single Man's UK Premiere
    A Single Man -- UK Trailer
    Trailer 1:27
    A Single Man -- UK Trailer
    A Single Man -- UK Trailer
    Trailer 1:27
    A Single Man -- UK Trailer
    A Single Man
    Trailer 2:04
    A Single Man
    A Single Man
    Clip 0:47
    A Single Man
    A Single Man
    Clip 0:23
    A Single Man
    A Single Man
    Clip 0:26
    A Single Man

    Fotos185

    Poster ansehen
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    + 181
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung39

    Ändern
    Colin Firth
    Colin Firth
    • George
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Charley
    Matthew Goode
    Matthew Goode
    • Jim
    Nicholas Hoult
    Nicholas Hoult
    • Kenny
    Jon Kortajarena
    Jon Kortajarena
    • Carlos
    Paulette Lamori
    Paulette Lamori
    • Alva
    Ryan Simpkins
    Ryan Simpkins
    • Jennifer Strunk
    Ginnifer Goodwin
    Ginnifer Goodwin
    • Mrs. Strunk
    Teddy Sears
    Teddy Sears
    • Mr. Strunk
    Paul Butler
    • Christopher Strunk
    Aaron Sanders
    • Tom Strunk
    Aline Weber
    • Lois
    Keri Lynn Pratt
    Keri Lynn Pratt
    • Blonde Secretary
    Jenna Gavigan
    Jenna Gavigan
    • Other Secretary #1
    Alicia Carr
    Alicia Carr
    • Other Secretary #2
    Lee Pace
    Lee Pace
    • Grant
    Adam Shapiro
    Adam Shapiro
    • Myron
    Marlene Martinez
    Marlene Martinez
    • Maria
    • Regie
      • Tom Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Christopher Isherwood
      • Tom Ford
      • David Scearce
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen319

    7,5120.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    cllrdr-1

    A genuinely pleasant surprise

    I loved Isherwood's novel (it's a novel, not a short story as a previous poster claimed) ever since it appeared back in 1964, to scathing reviews. Gay love wasn't taken seriously back then. Stonewall was five years away. But Isherwood was always his own man. Over the years I've mentioned the book to gay filmmakers, several of whom knew it and liked it. But all were chary of adapting a stream-of-consciousness narrative to the screen. That Tom Ford (of all people) has taken it on and done so well by it is rather astonishing. Yes, being the Fashion God that he is the film looks lovely. But it isn't all "look." Ford really understands what Isherwood was driving at. And while casting an actor as great as Colin Firth is a logical production decision, knowing what to do with him requires real talent. And Ford has talent by the ton. Matthew Goode is lovely. Nicholas Hoult a real surprise -- especially if you know him only for "About a Boy." And Julianne Moore is perfect as always. So much better (and more important) than "Brokeback Mountain."
    Benedict_Cumberbatch

    Colin Firth and Julianne Moore shine (as usual) in Tom Ford's brilliant directorial debut

    Tom Ford, you surprised me. I don't really follow the fashion world too closely at all, so although I naturally knew his name, I wasn't familiar with his creations. I haven't read the Christopher Isherwood novel (yet), so Colin Firth and Julianne Moore were the ones who actually got me excited for this project. And I wasn't disappointed – it actually exceeded all my expectations, and alongside Jane Campion's "Bright Star" (which unfortunately is being almost completely overlooked this awards season), it's the most poetic 2009 film I have seen so far.

    Firth, always elegant and fascinating, plays George Falconer, a British professor in 1960's Los Angeles trying to cope with the death of his long-term partner, Jim (Matthew Goode). It's been eight months since Jim's death, and George decided to end his life by the end of the day – and it's this day we see in this admirable film. George spends time with his best friend Charley (the always wonderful Julianne Moore), with whom he had something in the past (and still has hopes of winning him over again), and now is an unhappy divorcée. A young pupil, Kenny (Nicholas Hoult, who has grown up a lot since "About a Boy" and "The Weather Man"), who clearly is infatuated with George, harasses him until he finally gives him the attention he craves. These two different encounters will be decisive for George. As sad as the overall tone and the theme of mourning can be, "A Single Man" is by no means depressing. Ford uses and abuses of "artsy", but very efficient and intriguing camera angles, and a classy score by Polish composer Abel Korzeniowski. Eyes, lips are shown in evidence throughout the film, and naturally, the costumes are all superb.

    George's long day's journey reminds me a lot of Virginia Woolf's classic "Mrs. Dalloway". Marleen Gorris was able to do a correct but somewhat cold adaptation of Woolf's novel in 1997 (scripted by Woolf scholar and talented actress Eileen Atkins, featuring the magnificent Vanessa Redgrave in the title role), but I thought she wasn't much to blame for the film's coldness since that's one of the most complex novels to be translated to the screen. After seeing "A Single Man", I even dare to say Tom Ford could do an interesting and very personal adaptation of "Mrs. Dalloway". Also, this is one of the sexiest films since Alfonso Cuaron's "Y Tu Mama Tambien" (2001) and Bernardo Bertolucci's "The Dreamers" (2003), and Nicholas Hoult's incandescent presence has a lot to do with that. He gives an efficient, brave performance for an actor his age, and although I'm sure Jamie Bell ("Billy Elliot"), who was the first choice for the role, would've been terrific, Hoult doesn't disappoint. It's not every day we're given a film with such emotional intensity and exuberant sensuality, and "A Single Man" proves that Tom Ford is certainly a promising director, having given us not just a great first film, but one also one of the year's finest and most unusual creations. A film to be felt and celebrated, and I can't wait for the DVD - it's a keeper. 10/10.
    7sol-

    A Serious Man

    Depression overwhelms a college professor on the anniversary of his boyfriend's tragic death in this drama written and directed by Tom Ford. As per Ford's latter 'Nocturnal Animals', this is a visually arresting and finely acted motion picture, further topped off with a superb Golden Globe nominated score. While some of Ford's imagery is a little ostentatious, he shows perfect restrain at other points, allowing Colin Firth to emote silently in close-up during a flashback in which he hears the news of his boyfriend's death by phone. Ford's use of slow motion as Firth drives along, watching neighbourhood kids and others works very well too; one truly gets the sense of Firth using the day to contemplate whether he can go on living or whether he should poetically end it all. There is, however, no escaping how slim the narrative is and not all of the subplots that crop up necessarily gel. Julianne Moore's turn as his best friend adds surprisingly little to his journey, except for some unanswered questions about their past together. It is hard to know what to make of Jon Kortajarena's gigolo either, however, Nicholas Hoult has a nice turn with a lot of suggestiveness as one of Firth's students with an unusual interest in him. Indeed, while all the little bits and pieces here might not necessarily add up, the experience of 'A Single Man' resonates long after it is over.
    9ElMaruecan82

    If you can't envision a bright future, trust the present's small moments to take you there...

    It was French poet and writer Lamartine who said "one person is missing and the whole word seems depopulated". George Falconer lives in such a world as he's mourning the man who has shared his life for sixteen years... and the grieving process has taken him to an existential dead-end. His Jim (Matthew Goode) whom we see lying in a snowy road after a car accident was more than a life companion but a soul-mate. With him, George had found as perfect contentment as perfect could get, and with that tragic accident, a part of himself died too; the loss is so overwhelming that George intends to kill himself. Colin Firth is the titular single man, resigned to end a life that has lost all purpose.

    It is a bleak introduction to Tom Ford's adaptation of Christopher Isherwood's novel, a powerful examination of the struggle to get over a loss but what would you expect from a movie whose first screen title is "Fade to Black"? The movie is emotionally loaded and restrains itself so much you can sense the electricity before the storm, but we get to have a few sunny flashbacks to understand that George wasn't born a misanthropic sourpuss. That the film features a same-sex couple is almost incidental, there's no sex scene and the smaller moments the better: a cozy conversation on a sofa, a discussion about the past in a beach, yet "A Single Man" couldn't have been as powerful with a man and a woman and for that, you can't do without the film's context.

    The story is set in the midst of the Cuba missiles crisis when the world's future was hanging on a thread and America was the leader of the Free World, but with a rather selective approach of freedom as far as personal lifestyles went. A man couldn't live his sexuality if it wasn't the "right one", living as a homosexual was an ordeal in the public sphere and in private, it was tougher to find someone. Yet George found one and could conceal under a façade of pure clean-cut British rigidity his real self. With Jim, he found not just love but authenticity in a world that relied too much on slogans (mostly political), appearances and hypocrisy. It's interesting that the couple in this film can work as a metaphor for being free or true to our nature under a society not much traditional as it was reactionary (American values against the Red Scare).

    There's an important scene where George lectures his student about fear, using World War II and racism as examples, and the notion of fear is connected to causes that can be either real or factice. The point is that everything has a cause, not all the causes are real, but they exist as fabricated. What matters then is the truth, tending to it, whether through History or from experience: one of his student Kenny (Nicholas Hoult) hates the past and is scared by the future (during the Cuban crisis, many people were), what's left from it? Maybe the present and the way it might build him to his own realizations and understanding of the world. This is basically the premise of that harrowing journey where George contemplates his life and the probability of its termination.

    And if anything, the film isn't about the struggles of homosexuals in the 60s, though there are references to the prevailing homophobia, it's about someone who lost the balance of his life, the personal tunnel to his own truth, the link between the present and the future, and condemned himself to isolation then suicide because there was no future to conceive with anyone. He has a friend named Charley (Julianne Moore), she's divorced, disillusioned about life, but she loves him and for all the joyful and fun moments they spend together (Firth and Moore have great chemistry), George can't connect the present with her to any bright vision of the future. The film says something about the value of the present as one step that makes you climb the stairs of your life. It's only after he meets again Kenny, the student who admires him (and a little more) that he starts feeling the stairs can be worth climbing.

    But that's only an interpretation of the story, one must take the film at face value and appreciate its "present"; a man drowning in an ocean of loneliness that gives its full meaning to the title, so isolated a man that he actually raises the interest of people around him because -and maybe George doesn't realize it himself- he's still part of his world. The film makes no secret about George's planned suicide but it's expressed in an interesting way: he lives the last day at its fullest, staring at muscular tennis players' bodies as if he was photographing them in his mind, a beautiful blonde girl's hair, he caresses a dog who reminds him of his friend's. These moments are so intense that it might leave the impression that Tom Ford over-designed his film, made it too stylish for its own good as if he was trying to channel Bergman.

    I didn't mind that actually, it's interesting that the more intensely George looked at his world, the more it meant his preparation to death, looking at the pink smog of L.A., he says that even the ugliest thing have a beautiful side, as if people focused on beauty had the ugliest thoughts and missed the best part of what living is about. When he meets the young Spanish model, it's romantic in an artificial and abrupt way, when he meets Kenny again, they go swimming, the present doesn't reveal any truth but shows him a way like it almost saved his life at a tragicomic moment involving a gun and the right pillow position to pull the trigger. If you can't envision a bright future, trust the present's small moments to take you there...
    9lucymeyerrisi

    The Power Of Love

    A stunning outing for Tom Ford. The images are, clearly, out of an aesthete's mind without being shallow, ever. I believe there is a dramatic reason behind every frame. Colin Firth, looking truly handsome, goes through a day of torment with remarkable civility. I felt involved and shaken and couldn't help but make mine his pain. The flashbacks with Matthew Goode are truly vivid and truthful. This is a step forward in explaining through images that love is love no matter who you are, where you come from or what your circumstances are. It could have been a man and a woman, the fact that it's a man and a man is almost irrelevant. We recognize the feel of it and Colin Firth's performance is the magic stroke that makes that not only possible but natural. It is a sensational debut for fashion star Tom Ford. True to himself an artist that promises great, wonderful things for the future. I can't wait.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      On February 21, 2010, when he won a BAFTA for Best Actor, Colin Firth's list of people to thank included the man who repaired his refrigerator. Firth explained that he'd decided to turn down the part, and had an email to director Tom Ford in his outbox, waiting to be sent. Then a man arrived to repair his refrigerator, and Firth had time to reconsider.
    • Patzer
      At the end of the movie, the bandage that Kenny puts on George's forehead doesn't entirely cover the cut. In the next shot, it does.
    • Zitate

      George: [last lines; voiceover] A few times in my life I've had moments of absolute clarity, when for a few brief seconds the silence drowns out the noise and I can feel rather than think, and things seem so sharp. And the world seems so fresh as though it had all just come into existence. I can never make these moments last. I cling to them, but like everything, they fade. I have lived my life on these moments. They pull me back to the present, and I realize that everything is exactly the way it was meant to be.

    • Crazy Credits
      The production company, Fade to Black, is displayed in the opening, shown in white lettering outlined against a white background. It fades to white.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: 2012/The Messenger/Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Le Serpent qui Danse
      Lyrics by Charles Baudelaire

      Music by Serge Gainsbourg

      Performed by Serge Gainsbourg

      Courtesy of Mercury France

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. April 2010 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Người Đàn Ông Cô Đơn
    • Drehorte
      • Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park - 10700 W. Escondido Canyon Rd., Agua Dulce, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Fade to Black Productions
      • Depth of Field
      • Artina Films
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 7.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 9.176.000 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 217.332 $
      • 13. Dez. 2009
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 24.964.890 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 39 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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