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Phoenix

  • 2014
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 38 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
21.470
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nina Hoss in Phoenix (2014)
A disfigured concentration-camp survivor, unrecognizable after facial reconstruction surgery, searches ravaged postwar Berlin for the husband  who might have betrayed her to the Nazis.
trailer wiedergeben2:05
1 Video
84 Fotos
DramaGeschichteMusikRomanze

Ein entstellter Überlebender des Holocaust macht sich auf den Weg, um festzustellen, ob der Mann, den sie liebte, ihr Vertrauen missbraucht hat.Ein entstellter Überlebender des Holocaust macht sich auf den Weg, um festzustellen, ob der Mann, den sie liebte, ihr Vertrauen missbraucht hat.Ein entstellter Überlebender des Holocaust macht sich auf den Weg, um festzustellen, ob der Mann, den sie liebte, ihr Vertrauen missbraucht hat.

  • Regie
    • Christian Petzold
  • Drehbuch
    • Christian Petzold
    • Harun Farocki
    • Hubert Monteilhet
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Nina Hoss
    • Ronald Zehrfeld
    • Nina Kunzendorf
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    21.470
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Christian Petzold
    • Drehbuch
      • Christian Petzold
      • Harun Farocki
      • Hubert Monteilhet
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Nina Hoss
      • Ronald Zehrfeld
      • Nina Kunzendorf
    • 92Benutzerrezensionen
    • 282Kritische Rezensionen
    • 89Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 17 Gewinne & 30 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    U.S. Trailer

    Fotos84

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    Topbesetzung21

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    Nina Hoss
    Nina Hoss
    • Nelly Lenz
    Ronald Zehrfeld
    Ronald Zehrfeld
    • Johnny Lenz
    Nina Kunzendorf
    • Lene Winter
    Trystan Pütter
    Trystan Pütter
    • Soldat an der Brücke
    Michael Maertens
    Michael Maertens
    • Arzt
    Imogen Kogge
    • Elisabeth
    Felix Römer
    • Geiger
    Uwe Preuss
    Uwe Preuss
    • Clubbesitzer
    Valerie Neuenfels
    Valerie Neuenfels
    • Tänzerin
    • (as Valerie Koch)
    Eva Bay
    Eva Bay
    • Tänzerin
    Jeff Burrell
    Jeff Burrell
    • Soldat im Club
    Nikola Kastner
    Nikola Kastner
    • Junge Frau
    Max Hopp
    • Der Mann
    Megan Gay
    Megan Gay
    • Mitarbeiterin Zentralstelle Halensee
    Kirsten Block
    Kirsten Block
    • Wirtin
    Frank Seppeler
    • Alfred Mohnhaupt
    Daniela Holtz
    • Sigrid
    Kathrin Wehlisch
    • Monika
    • Regie
      • Christian Petzold
    • Drehbuch
      • Christian Petzold
      • Harun Farocki
      • Hubert Monteilhet
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen92

    7,321.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9Luddify

    One of the greatest film endings. Ever.

    You do have to suspend a bit of disbelief to get there on the haunting journey, but the movie's final scene will stay with you forever. Amazing performances by the two leads and assured, understated directing that only intensifies the climax.

    Absolutely not to be missed, even (or particularly) if you think you've seen every possible treatment of the toll of the Holocaust on individual lives.
    10blanche-2

    speak low

    What a movie.

    Nina Hoss, Ronald Zehrfeld, and Nina Kunzendorf star in "Phoenix," a 2014 film based on the French novel "Return from the Ashes".

    There was a previous film made from this novel, actually called Return from the Ashes in 1965. I remembered seeing that movie as a kid and finally found it again. It's very good, but this film is better.

    Nina Hoss plays Nelly, a concentration camp survivor who was shot in the face. A government worker, Lena (Kunzendorf) in charge of helping victims, brings her to a plastic surgeon.

    Nelly is adamant that she wants to look exactly as she did before. The doctor can only promise to try. When she asks Lena who is paying for all this, Lena tells her that her entire family is dead and she has come into quite a bit of money.

    When Nelly sees herself, the face is foreign to her and she says, "I don't exist." She stays in an apartment with Lena. Lena has found an apartment for her in Palestine, where Lena is also moving.

    Nelly wants to find her husband Johnny (Zehrfeld), a non-Jew, but Lena cautions her that he betrayed her to the Nazis. She was a singer and he a pianist, so she goes to various clubs, but finally finds him working in a club called Phoenix as a dishwasher.

    Johnny doesn't recognize her, but he asks her if she wants some work. He explains to her that he can't get his hands on his wife's money. He wants her to impersonate Nelly, show up alive, claim her inheritance, and in return, he will pay her.

    At first, Nelly refuses, then relents. He shows her a photo of Hedy Lamar and says his wife modeled herself on that.

    Nelly returns to Lena and tells her that she's going to do the impersonation and not go to Palestine. She will stay with Johnny. She knows he would never have betrayed her.

    Director Christian Pezold has woven noirish tapestry about survival, love, betrayal, and guilt. It is reminiscent of Vertigo but with the specter of the Holocaust, much deeper and intense.

    Nina Hoss is beyond perfection as Nelly, desperate for her old life, her old face, her husband, to wipe out all she has suffered. Like Zehrfeld, she says more with her expressions than with dialogue. Zehrfeld as Johnny presents a disturbing puzzle of denial and horrific guilt, so unbearable that he tries to recreate Nelly.

    The last scene in this film, in its simplicity, is stunning and powerful.

    A brilliant film, which you may want to view more than once to pick up details along the way.
    7arichmondfwc

    Different Ashes

    Hubert Monteilhet's novel has been filmed three times I saw two of them. The 1960's Return From The Ashes and this one, Phoenix (2014) - the one I haven't seen is a TV version from the 1980's Le retour d'Elisabeth Wolff, but now I really want to see it. Phoenix is a moody, painful journey to a rebirth. Nina Hoss is lovely as the survivor, Ronald Zehofeld plays the husband, object of her obsession. He's an interesting actor, a mix between Benicio del Toro and the young Orson Welles. Their scenes together have a realistic, tangible suspense. But Christian Petzold, the director of Jerichow (2008), gives the whole film a severe pace and tone, the 1964 version has a sharp, sophisticated script by Julius J Epstein with titles like Casablanca to his credit and J Lee Thompson at the helm, Thompson directed films like The Guns Of Navarone, Cape Fear and What A Way To Go. So his version, Return From The Ashes, is a whole other experience, at time it's even funny. With a superlative international cast cast, Maximilian Schell, Ingrid Thulin and Samantha Eggar - So one can see both films as it they weren't even related.
    8Sergeant_Tibbs

    Despite reservations with its choices of open resolutions, Phoenix is a stellar and quietly affecting film.

    Adapted from Hubert Monteilhet's novel 'Return from the Ashes,' director Christian Petzold's Phoenix has the air of a revisionist war film with a science-fiction twist. Granted, it has some liberties in the supposed advancement of medical science for the 1940s, featuring a surgery that's not even really possible today, but with its stark approach to its pulpy atmosphere, it's easy to buy into anything it wants to do because of its compelling narrative.

    The film follows Nelly, played by Nina Hoss, a Jewish concentration camp survivor and former nightclub singer who's suffered severe disfigurement. She undergoes facial reconstruction, nearly looking like her old self, and tries to find peace with her lost previous identity. She heads to post-war Berlin to locate her estranged husband and partner in their former activism, played by Ronald Zehrfeld, but upon doing so he recruits her to help him on a scam to claim his wife's inheritance. As she looks almost alike, he moulds her to act like his wife did and have her 'return' and scoop up the money.

    There's another liberty you have to buy in order to go along with Phoenix. That being, despite all the hints, at no point does her husband Johnny recognize Nelly until the inevitable moment. This redressing of a former lover plot line is quite reminiscent of Hitchcock's Vertigo, but with Johnny's indifference and greed it's a different spin, and we observe Nelly's submissive re- judgment of him. It thrives on the dramatic irony of when Johnny thinks that she isn't acting enough like his wife. It's fascinating to watch her rediscover herself, and a delight when she impresses him with how accurate she can be at times. All these minor contrivances work thematically to build a picture of a search for identity and heartbreaking betrayal. It's a refreshing perspective on a revision of a past life and then healing from it.

    Christian Petzold and Nina Hoss' collaborations have been steadily building momentum as Phoenix, their 4th film together, gains buzz on the festival circuit. Clearly it is a beneficial partnership. Through her glassy eyed look nearly in tears and her anxious movements, Hoss faultlessly marries fragility with a burning motivation to disquiet her soul. She may be easily manipulated due to her weakened psychological and physical state, but she always has intentions that she's slowly building up to. Before taking board with her husband, she's assisted by Lene, played by Nina Kunzendorf, a fellow Jewish activist. Her performance is steely and enigmatic, and I can't help but want to know more about her and her motivations so it's a shame the film doesn't quite deliver in that regard.

    Often times the film holds back on payoff, although it's often executed in thoughtful manners. Most strikingly is in the film's conclusion. In a way, it almost feels as though it's missing an entire third act. Perhaps the director felt it did not need an epilogue, but I was left hungry to explore the consequences. Hoss does admit that they didn't know how to end it. However, it is a remarkable display of restraint to leave it as open as it did and frankly it works with the slight nature of the film beforehand. But on the other hand it feels like Petzold simply ran out of ideas and is idly leaving the viewer to fill in the rest. The film constantly feels like it's building to something, and the ending changes everything in hindsight, but perhaps it works in the film's favour, to draw a comparison to The Sopranos' infamous final moment as it leaves you cold.

    Despite the film's small scale, with most of it taking place in Johnny's small apartment, it does show off lush production design. Postwar rubble has never felt quite a mess like this since Saving Private Ryan. The film does try to take on a grander scale, implying that the formation of Israel is like Nelly and reborn from the ashes, but it works best when it's focused on the core relationship. The saturated but vivid cinematography contributes to its beguiling pulp tone and it holds a lot of tension in the air, complimenting the weight of the performances. It's a fascinating concept and well-executed script, and my only reservations with Phoenix come with its choice of the resolutions for its various plot threads. But these are up for debate, and they're ones worth engaging in for such an otherwise stellar and quietly affecting film.

    8/10

    Read more @ The Awards Circuit (http://www.awardscircuit.com/)
    8texshelters

    Great acting and interesting themes propels this simple and successful film.

    Phoenix: Ziemlich großes Kino!

    Phoenix is a simple film with complicated themes of identity, survival, and loss. It is not your normal post WWII film, nor is it your typical concentration camp survivor story. The main character, Nelly, was in a camp and her trauma is reflected in the desperation of a divided Berlin. Her interactions with others are clearly influenced by her time in the camps, and Nina Hoss wonderfully portrays the protagonist.

    Unfortunately, the actor who plays the lead male, Johnny (Ronald Zehrfeld) is relatively ineffective compared to the stunning Hoss. I am not sure whether is is the script or the acting, but he clearly isn't up to her level. Nelly's best friend, Lena, is performed with skill by Nina Kunzendorf. While not as remarkable as Hoss, she holds her own in their scenes together.

    The look of the film is lovely, but it is clearly made on a budget. The music is appropriate for the mood and the era, though a couple of times too loud and overly dramatic. The pace is deliberate and effective.

    It is a good film that offers us no answers to the questions it poses: how do we survive after everything is taken away, how do we return to a life that no longer exists, whom do we trust now when many of our old friends were Nazi or collaborators during the war, how do we react to someone who returns who we thought was dead, and where do we go when nothing is left of our former life. In the film, like life, there are no easy answers. That only strengthens the film's appeal.

    Rating: Pay full price.

    I don't want to say to much for fear of giving too much away. The film, while not shocking, is not predicable.

    Peace, Tex Shelters

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      The woman on the magazine cover that Nelly liked to emulate was Hedy Lamarr.
    • Patzer
      The actor playing the US Army Sergeant sentry at the checkpoint is clearly German: while he speaks English well, his German accent still comes through.
    • Zitate

      [first lines]

      Lene Winter: [arriving at the border]

      Soldat an der Brücke: Passport... Nice car. Where did you get it from?

      Lene Winter: It's from Switzerland.

      Soldat an der Brücke: Just like you?

      Lene Winter: Like me.

      Soldat an der Brücke: [whistles to the gate] They're from Switzerland. The girl too.

      [to her passenger]

      Soldat an der Brücke: I want to see your face.

      Lene Winter: Can I talk to you?

      [gets out]

      Lene Winter: Come on, she's not Eva Braun.

      Soldat an der Brücke: Of course not. The bitch got killed by her husband.

      Lene Winter: She's from the camps.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Love/Work/Cinema: A Conversation with Christian Petzold and Nina Hoss (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Speak Low
      Music by Kurt Weill

      Lyrics by Ogden Nash

      Performed by Nina Hoss and heard as a theme over the credits

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 25. September 2014 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Deutschland
      • Polen
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Sprachen
      • Deutsch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Фенікс
    • Drehorte
      • Legnica, Dolnoslaskie, Polen(Berlin in 1945)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Schramm Film Koerner & Weber
      • Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR)
      • Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.184.472 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 30.296 $
      • 26. Juli 2015
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 5.855.623 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 38 Min.(98 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.39 : 1

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