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Morte a Venezia

  • 1971
  • GP
  • 2h 10min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
24 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Björn Andrésen and Dirk Bogarde in Morte a Venezia (1971)
Trailer for Death In Venice
Reproducir trailer3:50
1 video
99+ fotos
Period DramaDramaRomance

Mientras se recupera en Venecia, el enfermizo compositor Gustav von Aschenbach se fija peligrosamente en el adolescente Tadzio.Mientras se recupera en Venecia, el enfermizo compositor Gustav von Aschenbach se fija peligrosamente en el adolescente Tadzio.Mientras se recupera en Venecia, el enfermizo compositor Gustav von Aschenbach se fija peligrosamente en el adolescente Tadzio.

  • Dirección
    • Luchino Visconti
  • Guionistas
    • Thomas Mann
    • Luchino Visconti
    • Nicola Badalucco
  • Elenco
    • Dirk Bogarde
    • Romolo Valli
    • Mark Burns
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.3/10
    24 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Luchino Visconti
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Mann
      • Luchino Visconti
      • Nicola Badalucco
    • Elenco
      • Dirk Bogarde
      • Romolo Valli
      • Mark Burns
    • 152Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 75Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 18 premios ganados y 7 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Death In Venice
    Trailer 3:50
    Death In Venice

    Fotos119

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    Elenco principal27

    Editar
    Dirk Bogarde
    Dirk Bogarde
    • Gustav von Aschenbach
    Romolo Valli
    Romolo Valli
    • Hotel Manager
    Mark Burns
    Mark Burns
    • Alfred
    Nora Ricci
    Nora Ricci
    • Tadzio's Governess
    Marisa Berenson
    Marisa Berenson
    • Frau von Aschenbach
    Carole André
    Carole André
    • Esmeralda - Brothel Prostitute
    Björn Andrésen
    Björn Andrésen
    • Tadzio
    • (as Björn Andresen)
    Silvana Mangano
    Silvana Mangano
    • Tadzio's Mother
    Leslie French
    • Travel Agent
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Barber
    Antonio Appicella
    • Vagrant
    Sergio Garfagnoli
    • Jaschu - Polish Youth
    Ciro Cristofoletti
    • Hotel Clerk
    Luigi Battaglia
    • Scapegrace
    Dominique Darel
    Dominique Darel
    • English Tourist
    Masha Predit
    • Russian Tourist
    Eva Axén
    Eva Axén
    • Tadzio's Oldest Sister
    • (sin créditos)
    Marcello Bonini Olas
    • Nobleman at Hotel Party
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Luchino Visconti
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Mann
      • Luchino Visconti
      • Nicola Badalucco
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios152

    7.324K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    gasgiant

    One of the greatest foreign films ever

    Death in Venice is a must see for all of those interested in "great" film-making. I regard the film as essential watching. The final scene, in which the lovesick middle aged man watching a beautiful boy as his absurd makeup runs and he dies of the plague is one of the most horrific and sad in film history. Featuring the music of Gustav Mahler, we are visited by the dark, amber strains of his Fourth Symphony as we visit Venice, which has been beset with the plague. A middle aged man falls in love with a teenage boy, and is heartsick from afar. This is sumptuous, heartbreaking film-making. A must see.
    Patatino

    More and more beautiful as the years pass by

    "Slow", "slow", "slow"... I read many people complain "it's slow"... slow what? This movie takes its time. All the most beautiful things in life take time. When you make sex with your girlfriend would you try to make it last five minutes? No you would like to make it last the whole night. When you eat good food in a good restaurant would you like to finish it in two minutes? No, you sit down, enjoy the place, the food, the company and the wine. When you visit an art museum, would you rush through the rooms? No, you would move slowly, pay attention, and stop at the artworks that mean more to you. So why should a movie be different?

    If you want speed, then eat at McDonald's, rush in the tube, watch TV commercials, and pay a prostitute for a 5 minute work.

    If you are looking for real emotions, deep feelings and thoughts that will last in your memory and heart for a long time, then you don't want to miss this movie.

    One caveat: don't go watching it for the gay theme. This movie isn't about gay love, if you look at it through this point of view, it will let you down completely. This movie is symbolism from beginning to end, it does not speak of what you see. It speaks of the struggle of the artist to reach the beauty, so close, always unreachable, and, like another reader perfectly commented, so inevitably connected with death, because the only perfection that a living being can ever attain, is in the death. If you look at the movie from this point of view, it will show to you for what it is: a complete masterpiece, from beginning to end.
    8raymond-15

    Unforgettable romantic drama

    Set in Venice mainly on the Lido, Visconti's "Death in Venice" is a triumph of filmmaking combining the excellence of Dirk Bogarde's characterisation and expert photography of the resort area in all its various daily moods. For those who love Venice, this is a film to cherish.

    Mahler's music frequently heard throughout the film heightens the drama. The mood it creates is not always happy. But then what else would you expect with a title like that?

    There is not a lot of dialogue in the film. Rather sparse in fact. It's mainly background noises and chatter and laughter among the hotel guests. The intriguing part is to interpret the exchange of glances between Gustav von Aschenbach a composer of some renown and a slim teenage youth Tadzio who see each other from time to time across the tables of the hotel dining room, on the beach and at odd unexpected places around Venice. They seem to acknowledge each other's presence shyly at first with little more than the suggestion of a smile but later with a strong and riveting and urgent gaze.

    Each viewer will have his own interpretation. The composer has lost a child of his own. Is this behaviour an expression of yearning for the child he loved? Is it perhaps a sexual attraction towards this fragile young man with his dazed somewhat girlish stare? Could he be discovering some new inspiration for a yet unwritten musical masterpiece? Who knows?

    From beginning to end this film captures the true spirit of 19th Century Venice. The elegance of the ladies, the deck chairs on the sand, the children frolicking in their neck-to-knee bathing costumes, the glow of sunsets and a general feeling of satisfaction with the world. While some may think the pace is rather slow at times, the film has an overall gentle quality, but with a simmering indecision between two repressed human beings. Be prepared for a sad and beautiful ending.
    8auberus

    A haunting piece of cinema, a true emotional experience, a masterpiece

    Luchino Visconti's 'Death in Venice' is one of the most misunderstood masterpieces of cinema. Based on Thomas Mann's 1913 classic novella of the same name, the film not only capture the quintessential of the novel but also reinforce a powerful questioning through superb visuals. Adapted by Mr. Visconti himself who decided to focus on the Venice chapter only as well as to modify the occupation of the main protagonist, Gustav von Aschenbach who becomes a music composer (highly inspired by the composer Mahler), the film was also inspired by other Thomas Mann's novel like 'Doctor Faustus' or by Marcel Proust's writing. Often reduced and presented as a decadent film in which homosexuality and pedophilia are the main themes, the novel like the movie deals in fact with a much more complex and powerful dynamic.

    Indeed the film is based on an equation between Death and Beauty as an aphorism for Perfection and in which the results is Time (or the lack of it). Perfection, Beauty is a chimer, pursuing it is pursuing Death as Time is passing by. At first von Aschenbach does not understand why the perfection of the form in his musical composition does not lead to the perfection of his symphony and therefore lose himself in a quest for Beauty following the young Tadzio as not only a symbol for this ultimate Beauty / Perfection but also as the Mask of Death. In this Venice, marked by Death and cursed by the plague, the Time is running out and the fascinating quest for Perfection finally appears to be a dangerous game to play.

    All the notions that build up to the main questioning are revealed during this quest for Perfection and this race against Death. The notion of Urgency reinforced by an avoidable sorrow as Von Aschenbach realizes he is getting old in the hair dresser scene. The notion of isolation right from the beginning emphases by the personality of Aschenbach himself and showed by Visconti as someone cold and rigid and therefore alone. The notion of Desire which leads to the understanding of the main questioning: for Aschenbach, Perfection is reached through hard work it is a consequence not a fact. The Young Tadzio blows away this certitude. Does von Aschenbach desire Tadzio or is he fascinated by what he represents: Perfect Beauty?

    The challenge of Luchino Visconti was to apply a superb cinematography and a precise narrative method to a film that in nature deals with complex concepts. By succeeding in this task Mr. Visconti delivers a haunting piece of cinema, a true emotional experience, a masterpiece.
    10ItalianGerry

    The best possible film of Mann's novella.

    Luchino Visconti's "Death in Venice" is a masterpiece of utterly haunting beauty that will capture the imagination of anyone interested in the screen's capacity for breathtaking images. It is a poignant tragedy based on Thomas Mann's classic novella of the same name. Visconti has captured many of the essential qualities of the book and employed a superb visual style (with the assistance of the great cinematographer Pasqualino DeSantis) for a story which is essentially an interior one. It is about the struggle within the soul of a man, Gustav von Aschenbach, a composer vacationing in the Venice of 1911.

    In Mann's book Aschenbach was a writer, but Visconti asserted that the book had been inspired by events in the life of Gustav Mahler, whose music, mostly the haunting adagietto of his Fifth Symphony, is used as background (and foreground) music, helping create an almost tactile mood of melancholy.

    Dirk Bogarde plays Aschenbach, a man possessed by feelings of failure, haunted by the grief he and his wife (Marisa Berensen) shared over the death of their daughter. He is a man on the precipice of emotional collapse who finds both redemption and destruction in the contemplation of beauty. "The creation of beauty and purity is a spiritual act." God and composers are alike.

    In this film beauty becomes incarnate in the form of a young Polish boy vacationing at the same hotel, the Hotel des Bains on the Lido. The boy's stately mother is played by Silvana Mangano. The long-haired blond boy is Tadziu, aged 14, played by the Swedish Bjørn Andresen. Aschenbach is smitten by, then obsessed with, the boy's beauty, in a manner that is more spiritual than sexual, but which must also contain a good deal of sublimated sexual longing.

    At first he merely steals opportunities to look at the lad. They never speak. Gradually he starts to seek him out, self-destructively spurred-on by the boy's coquettishness and knowing glances. Bogarde makes the character's longing as tangibly moving as it is ultimately pathetic.

    All this takes place in a misty Venice dense with metaphorical gloom and a mysterious plague (cholera) carrying death to its inhabitants. In one horrifying scene a barber "re-makes" Aschenbach's face so that it is both a grotesque parody of youth and an ominous death mask.

    Visconti's skill in recreating lush period detail, to paint family-album poses of aristocracy, to make beauty seem dangerous, to underline the complexity of human psychology, are all in evidence here. The color photography by Pasqualino De Santis, and the costumes by Piero Tosi are excellent.

    The ending of the film is unforgettable: Gustav languishing on the beach, the Polish folk song in the background, the boy Tadziu in the water turning into an angelic apparition with extended hand. Overwhelming!

    I cannot imagine a better film ever being made of Mann's great and essential work.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      The boy on whom Tadzio was based, Wladyslaw Gerard Jan Nepomuk Marya Moes, was only 10 in May 1911.
    • Errores
      TV aerials are clearly visible on Venetian rooftops in one scene.
    • Citas

      Alfred: Do you know what lies at the bottom of the mainstream? Mediocrity.

    • Versiones alternativas
      The 'pan and scan' VHS released in 1993 by Warner Home Video has an extended overture of music over black - and after the opening titles goes to a hard cut, mid-shot, of Bogarde sitting on the deck of a ship (totally omitting the opening establishing shot of the the ship at sea in long shot - and much of the subsequent establishing shot of Bogarde.)
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Temporada de Caça (1988)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Sehr Langsam Misterioso from Symphony No.3
      Written by Gustav Mahler

      Performed by Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia (as The Orchestra of the Academy of Saint Cecilia) and Lucretia West (alto)

      Conducted by Franco Mannino

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is Death in Venice?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 4 de junio de 1971 (Francia)
    • Países de origen
      • Italia
      • Francia
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
      • Polaco
      • Francés
      • Ruso
      • Alemán
    • También se conoce como
      • Death in Venice
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Grand Hotel des Bains, Lungomare Marconi 41, Lido, Venice, Veneto, Italia(hotel)
    • Productoras
      • Alfa Cinematografica
      • Warner Bros.
      • PECF
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 5,597
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 10 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39 : 1

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