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Der Blender - The Imposter

Originaltitel: The Imposter
  • 2012
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 39 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
51.881
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Der Blender - The Imposter (2012)
A documentary centered on a young Frenchman who convinces a grieving Texas family that he is their 16-year-old son who went missing for 3 years.
trailer wiedergeben2:33
6 Videos
98 Fotos
Crime DocumentaryDocudramaPsychological DramaPsychological ThrillerTragedyTrue CrimeBiographyCrimeDocumentaryDrama

Ein Dokumentarfilm über einen jungen Mann in Spanien, der gegenüber einer trauernden Familie aus Texas behauptet, ihr seit drei Jahren verschollener 16-jähriger Sohn zu sein.Ein Dokumentarfilm über einen jungen Mann in Spanien, der gegenüber einer trauernden Familie aus Texas behauptet, ihr seit drei Jahren verschollener 16-jähriger Sohn zu sein.Ein Dokumentarfilm über einen jungen Mann in Spanien, der gegenüber einer trauernden Familie aus Texas behauptet, ihr seit drei Jahren verschollener 16-jähriger Sohn zu sein.

  • Regie
    • Bart Layton
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Adam O'Brian
    • Nicholas Barclay
    • Carey Gibson
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,4/10
    51.881
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Bart Layton
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Adam O'Brian
      • Nicholas Barclay
      • Carey Gibson
    • 114Benutzerrezensionen
    • 115Kritische Rezensionen
    • 77Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 BAFTA Award gewonnen
      • 13 Gewinne & 34 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos6

    Theatrical Version
    Trailer 2:33
    Theatrical Version
    The Imposter
    Trailer 2:26
    The Imposter
    The Imposter
    Trailer 2:26
    The Imposter
    The Imposter: They Would Love Me Even More (Spanish Subtitled)
    Clip 1:25
    The Imposter: They Would Love Me Even More (Spanish Subtitled)
    The Imposter: Nicholas Was Home (Spanish Subtitled)
    Clip 1:42
    The Imposter: Nicholas Was Home (Spanish Subtitled)
    The Imposter: Back To School (Spanish Subtitled)
    Clip 1:48
    The Imposter: Back To School (Spanish Subtitled)
    The Imposter: Aliases (Spanish Subtitled)
    Clip 1:26
    The Imposter: Aliases (Spanish Subtitled)

    Fotos98

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    + 93
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung27

    Ändern
    Adam O'Brian
    Adam O'Brian
    • Frédéric Bourdin
    Nicholas Barclay
    Nicholas Barclay
    • Self - Missing Person
    • (Archivfilmmaterial)
    Carey Gibson
    Carey Gibson
    • Self - Nicholas' Sister
    Bryan Gibson
    Bryan Gibson
    • Self - Nicholas' Brother-in-Law
    Beverly Dollarhide
    Beverly Dollarhide
    • Self - Nicholas' Mother
    Frédéric Bourdin
    Frédéric Bourdin
    • Self - Imposter
    • (as Frederic Bourdin)
    Nancy Fisher
    Nancy Fisher
    • Self - Special Agent, FBI
    • (as Nancy B. Fisher)
    Philip French
    Philip French
    • Self - Consul General, U. S. Embassy in Spain
    • (as Phillip French)
    Codey Gibson
    Codey Gibson
    • Self - Nicholas' Nephew
    Charlie Parker
    Charlie Parker
    • Self - Private Investigator
    Bruce Perry
    Bruce Perry
    • Self - Texas Children's Hospital
    • (as Bruce D. Perry)
    Allie Hostetler
    Allie Hostetler
    • Self - Nicholas' Neighbor
    • (as Allie Hosteiler)
    Kevin Hendricks
    Kevin Hendricks
    • Self - Nicholas' Childhood Friend
    Anna Ruben
    Anna Ruben
    • Carey Gibson
    Cathy Dresbach
    • Nancy Fisher
    Alan Teichman
    • Charlie Parker
    Ivan Villanueva
    • Social Worker
    María Jesús Hoyos
    María Jesús Hoyos
    • Judge
    • (as Maria Jesus Hoyos)
    • Regie
      • Bart Layton
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen114

    7,451.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8Gregorgreene

    Compelling

    I saw this film at the 2012 Edinburgh Film Festival. The film focuses on the story of Nicholas Barclay who disappeared from his Texas home in 1994. Three years later he's found in France and then re-united with his parents. But it's obvious he cannot be there son. He's an impostor; a 23 year old con-artist. The film explores the unravelling of this story through interviews and very well realised reconstructions of the events. Documentary recreations don't always work and can detract from the interviews but here they work very well.It makes for a strange and compelling film. A deliberation on the nature of truth and lies that had me completely gripped.
    7Pjtaylor-96-138044

    You couldn't make this stuff up.

    'The Imposter (2012)' is one of those movies that you really need to see to believe. As such, I'll try my very best to avoid spoiling even its most basic story beats. Still, I'd advise not reading further if you intend on watching the piece, which I highly recommend you do, because it feels as though the less you know, the more potent the experience will be. That said, the documentary tells an almost unbelievable tale that kicks off with a missing child and only gets stranger and sadder from there. It's very forthcoming with its first major twist, opting to reveal the nature of its eponymous imposter surprisingly early. Rather than use it for a shock later down the line, it uses it to drown the entire affair in dramatic irony. This choice transforms the piece from focusing on what its central con is, to how that con was even successful in the first place. It allows the flick to ruminate on some interesting themes of deception, perception and ignorance. It's never as straightforward as you think and it still provides plenty of powerful twists and turns, despite the fact that what could have been its most major one is - as I mentioned - laid bare almost as soon as the thing starts. The film plays out a bit like the con it retells, allowing some of its subjects to manipulate the audience just as they manipulated people in real life. For the most part, it remains neutral and allows its viewers to make up their own minds. Because of the ever-shifting nature of the story, that isn't as simple as it would first seem. You're likely to be turning the plot over in your mind long after the inevitability unsatisfying conclusion has been and gone. The piece does end on a pretty damning statement from its eponymous trickster, which almost solidifies its (or, rather, its makers') true feelings towards its subject matter and yet doesn't feel like a betrayal of the flick's otherwise distant approach. The film really is captivating. It's actually, if you'll pardon the cliché, stranger than fiction; if it were a traditional film, you'd accuse its plot of being too unbelievable. It's an entertaining and well-executed documentary that makes excellent use of surprisingly formalistic recreations and effectively candid 'talking head' segments. At the end of the day, it portrays a really sad situation and it doesn't even pretend to provide an answer to the most burning question it raises. It's an accomplished piece of work. 7/10.
    8Lejink

    Old Nick

    Stranger than fiction true-life documentary of the opportunistic and heartless identity-theft by a mature 23 year old French nationality homeless man who, after being picked up on the street in Limares, Spain assumed the identity of a young boy who had disappeared three years ago aged 13 from his home in Texas.

    The perpetrator, one Frederic Bourdin, randomly picked his new identity from a file of international missing persons whilst in police custody, although you would think he could have done a better job of it as he was at the time six years older than the boy Nicholas Barclay he chose to impersonate, had a different hair colour and spoke with a pronounced accent, never mind being separated by the Atlantic Ocean, but preying on a family elated at the prospect of the miraculous reappearance of their long lost son, he ran the whole nine yards in the role before finally a doctor's testimony put a stop to the charade and eventually saw Bourdin go to jail, leaving behind a family now heartbroken a second time and a host of incredulous officials duped by his brazen callowness.

    Like a dark version of the Emperor's New Clothes, this is a story of a desperate family seeing what wasn't there and believing the impossible through the blinding distortion of their individual and collective grief. It all really starts with the boy's sister who flies to Spain and immediately falls for her long-lost brother's incredible return from the dead, swallowing whole his explanations for his changes of appearance, voice and character. Bourdin, now spying a life of ease in America as the pampered born-again son, had decided to follow through with the ruse, dying his hair blond, adding a few tattoos and concocting a fantastical story of being kidnapped and transported abroad to a life as a sex-slave with the so-called gang even managing to conveniently change his eye-colour in the process.

    There's no question of the film-maker here attempting some is-he-or-isn't-he mystery, as the film's title makes clear, confirmed by Bourdin's first smirking, unrepentant appearance. The key events in the fraud are recreated dramatically and interspersed with interviews of all the major players in this unbelievable story set to a deliberately light, capering musical soundtrack which itself from the first strongly hints at the elusiveness and illusion at the heart of this incredible story.

    In the end Bourdin got jailed for six years, the missing boy's hapless family saw their hopes of his resurrection brutally dashed and of course, his abduction and likely murder returned to the files of the unexplained and unsolved.

    I came away from the film with a sense of how the power of loss, especially that of a child, can so blind a family which had given up hope and a sense of rage at the heartless selfishness of a still apparently unapologetic sick individual who even today diverts blame back to the trusting family who took him in.

    Pity help the wife and three children the film tells us in an epilogue he lives with today.
    8me-47-164358

    Interesting...

    I saw this film at it's European premiere last night at the Edinburgh Film Festival and I was very surprised. The first 1/3 of the film is a well stylized documentary but then this story, which goes from implausible to downright absurd. If the story wasn't true, you would find yourself thinking that the director was trying to string you along and at the very end pop out and say "naw, I was just kidding". There are so many parts of it the require you to suspend belief only to remind yourself it was reality.

    While there maybe no new information, the ability to portray complex situations from the perspective of the participant remind us all that truth and the human condition are relative. You are left with unanswered questions, doubts and just shaking your head. Well polished, well executed and well edited, there are few documentaries that can suck you into them and actually wonder what is next.
    8octopusluke

    A stupefying, 'wtf?' movie, which puts fictional thrillers to shame

    Considered a dead-cert win at the Academy Awards next year, Bart Layton's documentary The Imposter has rapidly generated a great deal of notoriety and acclaim. The quintessential 'stranger than fiction' tale, it's sensational blend of archive footage, delicate reconstructions and heartrending talking head interviews illustrate that, not only is Layton a masterful, investigative reporter, but moreover a profoundly impressive storyteller.

    Back in 1994, the blue-collar Barclay family from San Antonio, Texas, was left distraught after the disappearance of their 13-year-old son, Nicholas. Like any teenage boy, Nicholas was a cocksure kid, filled with energy, love for his family, and certainly wouldn't runaway from home for no good reason. Weeks turned into months, and eventually the case was abandoned by the police and press. Three years later, the local Texas police department receives an international call from Spain. On the receiving end is a character claiming to be Nicholas. Putting in a bogus story about how he escaped the clutches of a drug fuelled, pedophilic organization, the police think his story check out, and soon enough Nicholas' sister Carey jets over to Europe to meet her long lost brother. In front of police officials, she takes a good look and identifies him as the legitimate lost brother. Three years ago, Nicholas was a blue-eyed, spunky American teenager, now he's transformed into a dark haired, brown-eyed man with stubble and an irreplaceable French accent.

    The Imposter, like it's central subject, is not the documentary you expect it to be. With many twists, contortions and moral judgements, your pretty much open-mouth and on the edge of your seat throughout the film's entirety. That's partly down to Layton's craft, particularly the Errol Morris-like interviewing technique – which sees people gaze directly into the lens of the camera and, vicariously, straight at us. But, even more astounding, is the capricious performer that names the film. Frédéric Bourdin, a then 23-year-old man of French-Algerian descent, is actively impersonating Nicholas the whole time, convincing not only the state officials, but the abandoned boy's own mother. With a shrouded history as a homeless orphan thrown into the life of deception and petty crime, he longed to fit in and have a family of his own. When that opportunity didn't surface, he decided to steal Nicholas's own.

    "How could he get away with it?" I hear you cry. That's something I'll leave for you to answer when you see this documentary. Suffice to say, Bourdin is an intimidatingly convincing, intelligent and charismatic figure. To the point where we sit back and reflect whether we could have been swung by his quick wit. Even if Bourdin is the great pretender, a new revelation in the film's final act suggests that the Barclay family are perhaps keeping up appearances of their own.

    It may not be my favourite documentary of the year (The Act of Killing, if you were wondering), but The Imposter is the best psychological thriller I've seen in recent memory. It transcends the documentary stratum. A dauntingly universal account of a missing child and false identity, it's stupefying moments will leave you silenced whilst the movie plays out. But, as soon as the credits roll, you'll be talking about this exceptional movie for years to come.

    Read more reviews at: http://www.366movies.com

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The family of Nicholas Barclay initially declined to participate in the documentary, as they felt they had been unfairly portrayed in the media in the past, and they had lost much of their home video footage of Nicholas in a fire. They eventually consented to be interviewed, and the small amount of footage that has survived was used.
    • Patzer
      At the beginning of the film, Frédéric Bourdin's hair line is very defined and has dark hair. But by the end of the film he has a noticeable receding hairline. However, the film portrays his talking scenes as one long interview as his shirt never changes.
    • Zitate

      Frédéric Bourdin - Imposter: Before I was born, I definitely had the wrong identity. I already didn't know - I was already prepared not to know who I really was. A new identity with a real passport, an American passport... I could go to the U.S., go to school there, live with that family, and just being someone and don't have never again to worry about being identified. I saw the opportunity.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Most Hard to Watch Documentaries (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Queen Bitch
      Written by David Bowie

      Performed by David Bowie

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 4. Juli 2013 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Avalon (Spain)
      • Official Facebook
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • El impostor
    • Drehorte
      • San Antonio, Texas, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • 24 Seven Productions
      • A&E IndieFilms
      • Channel 4
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 898.317 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 22.379 $
      • 15. Juli 2012
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 3.001.877 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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

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