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IMDbPro

El séptimo continente

Título original: Der siebente Kontinent
  • 1989
  • C
  • 1h 48min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.6/10
18 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
El séptimo continente (1989)
A European family who plan on escaping to Australia, seem caught up in their daily routine, only troubled by minor incidents. However, behind their apparent calm and repetitive existence, they are actually planning something sinister.
Reproducir trailer0:52
1 video
86 fotos
DramaTragedia

Una familia europea que planea escapar a Australia, parece atrapada en su rutina diaria, solo preocupada por incidentes menores. Sin embargo, detrás de su aparente calma y existencia repetit... Leer todoUna familia europea que planea escapar a Australia, parece atrapada en su rutina diaria, solo preocupada por incidentes menores. Sin embargo, detrás de su aparente calma y existencia repetitiva, en realidad están planeando algo siniestro.Una familia europea que planea escapar a Australia, parece atrapada en su rutina diaria, solo preocupada por incidentes menores. Sin embargo, detrás de su aparente calma y existencia repetitiva, en realidad están planeando algo siniestro.

  • Dirección
    • Michael Haneke
  • Guionistas
    • Michael Haneke
    • Johanna Teicht
  • Elenco
    • Birgit Doll
    • Dieter Berner
    • Leni Tanzer
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.6/10
    18 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Michael Haneke
    • Guionistas
      • Michael Haneke
      • Johanna Teicht
    • Elenco
      • Birgit Doll
      • Dieter Berner
      • Leni Tanzer
    • 72Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 52Opiniones de los críticos
    • 89Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:52
    Trailer

    Fotos86

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    Elenco principal11

    Editar
    Birgit Doll
    • Anna Schober
    Dieter Berner
    Dieter Berner
    • Georg Schober
    Leni Tanzer
    • Evi Schober
    Udo Samel
    Udo Samel
    • Alexander
    Silvia Fenz
    • Optiker Kundin
    Robert Dietl
    Robert Dietl
    Elisabeth Rath
    • Lehrerin
    Georges Kern
    Georg Friedrich
    Georg Friedrich
    • Störungsdienst der Post
    Meat Loaf
    Meat Loaf
    • Self
    • (material de archivo)
    • (sin créditos)
    Jennifer Rush
    Jennifer Rush
    • Self
    • (material de archivo)
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Michael Haneke
    • Guionistas
      • Michael Haneke
      • Johanna Teicht
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios72

    7.618.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    howard.schumann

    Burns its way into your psyche

    Arguably, no greater cinematic interpreter of alienation exists in the world today than Austrian director Michael Haneke. Haneke shows us characters whose response to the world around them has deadened, people who have forgotten how to feel, how to love, how to care. The Seventh Continent, the first film of the trilogy that, with Benny's Video (1992) and 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance (1994), depicts what Haneke has called "my country's emotional glaciation." Based on a true story of the disintegration of a middle class Austrian family, the film has little plot, only incident and observation. Divided into three parts and shot in episodic fragments, as in his 2002 film Code Unknown, each fragment is tenuously connected by fadeouts in which scenes start and end abruptly. A mood of banality is established early in an extended sequence in which a car moves through a car wash showing all the details of detergent sprays, high-pressure washers, and rotating brushes. At the end of the car wash is a travel poster beckoning tourists to visit Australia with a peaceful scene of sand and water, a motif that is repeated periodically during the film.

    The Schobers, husband George (Dieter Berner), wife Anna (Birgit Doll), and daughter Eva (Leni Tanzer), are the happily married family living next door. George is an engineer and Anna an optician. Eva is a bright child of about eight with deep, expressive eyes. The family moves through their morning ritual with precision -- brushing their teeth, feeding the fish, and eating breakfast with little conversation or emotional interaction. The camera avoids their faces, focusing on mundane objects such as a bowl of cereal, an alarm clock, a fish tank, a package of congealed broccoli. This preoccupation with objects underscores the lack of connection between the characters and the things they have acquired. We get our first hint that something is not right when Eva pretends to her teacher that she has lost her eyesight. Anna questions her about the incident, promising not to harm her if she tells the truth but, when Eva admits to the lie, suddenly slaps her across the face ignoring the fact that she is a very troubled little girl. It is from here that the cracks begin to widen.

    Depicting ritualistic actions like counting of money at a supermarket, the distractions of television, the meaninglessness of work, the film reflects the powerlessness and isolation of people in modern society. Haneke chronicles a family enslaved to the structures they have created, operating in a morass of emotional vacuity. The first hour may seem slow but it builds considerable tension until it reaches a shattering climax. Little by little the family disengages. George quits his job and writes letters to his parents hinting of something dark about to happen. In the absence of a spiritual core, without the possibility of meaningful action, the family sinks deeper into an abyss, unraveling and discarding the tightly woven structures of their life. Similar in theme to Todd Haynes' 1995 film Safe but with three times the power, The Seventh Continent is a ruthlessly intelligent film that burns its way into your psyche, leaving an indelible mark that will forever haunt your dreams.
    kentos

    a controlled freak-out

    Having spent a couple years now browsing thru IMDb, this is the first film I've seen that actually motivated me to leave a comment. I've seen 3 other (more recent) movies by Haneke: "Funny Games," "Code Unknown," and "The Piano Teacher." All of them disturbed me in their own special way--a feeling that I obviously don't mind getting from a film. "The 7th Continent," though, really blew me away in ways that I find difficult but necessary to describe.

    This was Haneke's first theatrical film & apparently based on a true story--although I'm always skeptical of such disclaimers (the same was said about "Picnic at Hanging Rock," another great creepy film). It's divided into 3 parts: 1987, 1988, and 1989. Many scenes repeat themselves, and we get a clear sense that the family (dad, mom, daughter) is going through the motions of modern life. The banalities have a bizarre and uneasy edge to them, though, that really piles up by the time Part 3 arrives. All I have to say about the last 40 minutes is: OH MY GOD! I thought Gaspar Noe's "I Can't Sleep" (?) had an excruciating buildup, but that one (with all its explicitness) can't hold a candle to the amount of emotional and physical devastation packed into the conclusion of "Continent."

    Fans of Haneke's later work should definitely check this one out to see the origin of his trademarks: no music score, seemingly pointless scenes that linger (often with little or no dialogue), off-putting camera angles (we sometimes see only the actors' hands or feet). While these techniques aren't always successful in his films ("Code" had some interminable moments), they all come together seamlessly in "Continent." A superb work!
    10GrumpyDwarf

    Art at its best

    Der Siebent Kontinent is a film you should watch. It is not pleasant neither does Michael Haneke uses any tricks in order to even interest you about the characters or their lives. Yet, it is as powerful as an atomic bomb during peace time. It is LOUD and its message (which is whatever you want it to be) is right in your face.

    It is amazing how a masterpiece needs no soundtrack, fancy camera work or explicit and extended dialogs.

    Unfortunately, it is very hard to find. The screenings are rare and no personal editions on VHS or DVD exist as far as I am aware. Many will recognize the "Piano Teacher" approach to directing but, this is as powerful as it can get. One of the finest examples of style not overlapping form.

    Treat yourself with this lesson. Watch it if you can. Specially if you experienced depression at a given time in your life.
    LLAAA4837

    An incredibly scary film

    A family, starved for attention and desperate to escape their daily life of abrasive routine, decide to turn things around one year and go against the routine. The film depicts their lives in three painful years of isolation, meaningless actions, and disillusionment. The first two-thirds of the film show the loud and hectic world that they are inexplicably a part of. Everything is just a series of actions. The semi-apocalyptic sequence shows a kind of desperate forcefulness of life that never breaks though, and the claustrophobic nature comes across as frighteningly unnerving. Tarkovsky would be proud.

    The Seventh Continent was the second Michael Haneke film I had seen after The Piano Teacher. While I do not think that it is as honest a film as The Piano Teacher, I do applaud the fearless dynamic of the film to be completely devoid of style and of typical film conventions in order to depict a world that grows increasingly unpredictable and harrowing. The film is very Hitchcock-like in how it slowly and quietly builds it's themes involving desolate emotions. It is a tremendously scary film, but it is scary in a way that comes off a lot stronger after the film has finished and you allow it's images to swim around in your head for a while. The loss of passion and of feeling in a human being, to my knowledge, has never been depicted in such a pessimistic way.

    This is a very angry film. This is a very resentful film. This is a film that celebrates sadness and anger and I hated watching it. When the film finds time to depict humanity, it writes it off like it is useless. What makes me even more angry about the film, in a way, is how you can almost feel Haneke behind the camera feeling resentful and wanting to punish the audience for wanting to view a film with a good story and a moving and engaging plot. Haneke goes so far out of his way to provide nothing in the way of narrative power and instead opts to craft an angry and traumatizing film. What makes the film work is it's power to provide some deeply haunting imagery and some truly worthwhile substance that I couldn't help but appreciate. Two of these three characters have complete control over everything that happens and they obviously feel that what they do in the final act of the film is most beneficial. Who am I to judge their own control over their lives. What pisses me off is how simple minded they are as characters. I just feel that Haneke prefers to emphasize these problems that these characters share, and what I am bothered by was that he didn't make it less obvious.

    Overall, it's not one of Haneke's best films, but for a debut theatrical picture it is about as good as one can get. What strikes me as rather unusual about this film, when compared to his other films, is how it suffers from the same major problems that pretty much all of his films have. For example, he has never been able to build any sympathy with any of his characters, at least from the films of his that I've seen, and this film is no different in that regard. The film of his that I personally think suffers the most from it is Funny Games (both versions). With his picture Cache, it only became a problem early on in the film, and in Benny's Video and Hour of the Wolf it helped add to the atmosphere while damaging the humanity of the films in question. I think that The Seventh Continent shows plenty of promise with Haneke and is extremely riveting at times, but it's easily the absolute worst place to start if you are interested in getting into his films. It will not leave you with a good impression of his work, and only after watching Funny Games and Cache (his most easily accessible films in my opinion) will you be able to catch his reoccurring themes.
    8K-nightt

    Whatever

    I think that many people will be able to identify with this film. As always, I made a point of knowing virtually nothing about it before I saw it, and I'd recommend doing the same. If you know about the plot beforehand, the impact will be markedly ruined. The first thought that came to mind after the first few sequences was "they haven't shown anyone's face yet".. I guess that's the point. If you are reading this, then you most likely are not starving, and are amongst the rich 1 billion of the world. So the actions portrayed initially in this middle class existence needn't any face, as they pertain to all of us, we the regurgitators of human aspirations (weird phrasing). We don't have a face, as there is nothing to tell us apart from the next person. Anyway, it's absurd to think that the mental process that took over the family is considered an exception, but the fact that it is only highlights how sick our society is, refusing to remodel this cataclysmic and decerebrate way of being. I was affected by the subsequent events that transpired, and one particular scene still haunts me in a vicious way, although it cannot be mentioned here... suffice to say it broke free from a certain degree of apathy shown by the main characters throughout, revealing the desperate and twisted cry of raw emotion that can exude from even the most planned chaos. Watch it all the way through, it is meant to bore you for a while, it wouldn't be the same if it didn't.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Based on real events.
    • Citas

      Georg Schober: We have to cancel the newspaper subscription

      Anna Schober: Mhm

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Selección TCM: Michael Haneke (2012)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Send Me Roses
      (uncredited)

      Written by Günter Mokesch and Karin Raab

      Performed by Günter Mokesch and Karin Raab

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    Preguntas Frecuentes16

    • How long is The Seventh Continent?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 9 de octubre de 1992 (Suecia)
    • País de origen
      • Austria
    • Idiomas
      • Alemán
      • Francés
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Seventh Continent
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Austria
    • Productora
      • Wega Film
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 428
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 48min(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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