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IMDbPro

Der Rote Baron

  • 2008
  • PG-13
  • 1h 46min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.3/10
13 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Joseph Fiennes, Til Schweiger, Lena Headey, and Matthias Schweighöfer in Der Rote Baron (2008)
September 1916 – a young aristocrat, Baron Manfred von Richthofen (Matthias Schweighöfer), is transferred to a German fighter division.  Numerous kills, his trademark bright red plane and the heroic conquests of his ‘Flying Circus’ squadron soon make him a German hero.  Yet manipulated by the High Command propaganda machine and distracted by fame, he remains blind to the true cost of conflict. After shooting down Canadian pilot Arthur Roy Brown (Joseph Fiennes) and pulling him out of the wreckage, he assists French nurse Kate Otersdorf (Lena Headey) in tending to the pilot’s wounded leg.
Reproducir trailer2:32
2 videos
30 fotos
AcciónAventuraBiografíaDramaGuerraRomance

Biografía alemana basada en el piloto alemán de la Primera Guerra Mundial Manfred Von Richthofen, apodado el Barón Rojo por amigos y enemigos.Biografía alemana basada en el piloto alemán de la Primera Guerra Mundial Manfred Von Richthofen, apodado el Barón Rojo por amigos y enemigos.Biografía alemana basada en el piloto alemán de la Primera Guerra Mundial Manfred Von Richthofen, apodado el Barón Rojo por amigos y enemigos.

  • Dirección
    • Nikolai Müllerschön
  • Guionista
    • Nikolai Müllerschön
  • Elenco
    • Matthias Schweighöfer
    • Lena Headey
    • Til Schweiger
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.3/10
    13 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Nikolai Müllerschön
    • Guionista
      • Nikolai Müllerschön
    • Elenco
      • Matthias Schweighöfer
      • Lena Headey
      • Til Schweiger
    • 95Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 29Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Videos2

    Red Baron
    Trailer 2:32
    Red Baron
    The Red Baron
    Trailer 2:43
    The Red Baron
    The Red Baron
    Trailer 2:43
    The Red Baron

    Fotos29

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    + 26
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    Elenco principal49

    Editar
    Matthias Schweighöfer
    Matthias Schweighöfer
    • Manfred von Richthofen
    Lena Headey
    Lena Headey
    • Käte
    Til Schweiger
    Til Schweiger
    • Voss
    Joseph Fiennes
    Joseph Fiennes
    • Brown
    Tomás Koutník
    • Young Manfred von Richthofen
    Tomás Ibl
    • Young Lothar von Richthofen
    Albert Franc
    • Young Wolfram von Richthofen
    Maxim Mehmet
    Maxim Mehmet
    • Sternberg
    Hanno Koffler
    Hanno Koffler
    • Lehmann
    Richard Krajco
    Richard Krajco
    • Hawker
    Steffen Schroeder
    Steffen Schroeder
    • Bodenschatz
    Lukás Príkazký
    Lukás Príkazký
    • Kirmaier
    Ondrej Volejník
    • 1st German Soldier
    Jirí Wohanka
    Jirí Wohanka
    • 2nd German Soldier
    Iveta Jirícková
    • Redhead Whore
    Vlastina Svátková
    Vlastina Svátková
    • Blonde Whore
    Axel Prahl
    • General Hoeppner
    Gitta Schweighöfer
    Gitta Schweighöfer
    • Kunigunde von Richthofen
    • Dirección
      • Nikolai Müllerschön
    • Guionista
      • Nikolai Müllerschön
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios95

    6.313.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    3Ralfscheapthrill

    missing target

    Few days ago I read an interview with Schweighöfer in which he's wondering why "The Red Baron" didn't get any subsidies. "Maybe they didn't like the script". They were right! And I don't think, the script was too controversial... I wish, it'd be. It's a pity that private financed productions like "As far as my feet will carry me" or even Vilsmaier's "Marlene" and now "The Red Baron" have producer's that are obviously willing to make the best movies they can, even without public money. they spent their budget on the cast, effects, good looks but they don't have a clue what to do with their values. They hire authors and directors who turn out to be just unable to cope with their projects. And most of the critics just complain about historical facts... I don't get it. It's a movie! But a badly told one. If you want to make a movie about a world war pilot who tries to be the best, then tell us, how he does it. And not in the main case, how he tries to win a nurse's heart! There are a lot of good love stories around, but THIS is the story of guy who liked to fly and shoot down enemies. If you pick it, stick to it. Don't be ashamed of your choice. It's quite funny to see a few quite impressing battle scenes, but the battles that mattered for the story are simply ignored. They get on the plane. Cut. Hospital. Everything that matters in the story is in the dialogs, not in actions. And even the important dialogs are filmed in cowardly undramatic distant shots... A waste of talent, chances and money.
    alvar777

    It is not perfect, but it worths

    Is funny how many film nerds take films literally and criticize them, narrow-minded and quick enough. Life is more than just obvious and literal things, so films usually try to show those things in a bit more exaggerate way so people realize how things are or at least, in order to express some idea or feeling. As books, movies sometimes tell about something else, and don't have to have taken literally. Is funny how many historian nerds claim faults in such film or other. Strictly historic accounts would take a unusual long movie to make. Always licenses are taken and some freedom, lyrically too, showed. Sometimes the faults are there, but sometimes too those faults are left aside for being uninteresting in a film making. I really failed to see or read the statement "this is a documentary film", or the like. On medics films, we hear the real medic persons complain about such drug or anesthetic. Come on, don't be so serious, films have to be dynamically paced, regardless its real pace speed. We have metaphors, remember? Boredom kills films more than anything on this world, perhaps.

    I went sideways, I know... about the film:

    With some lyric and historical licenses, this one adds something not shown before and with objectivity: man is being killed (as today) on both sides of the front, nothing else. Ideals are worthy as long as we keep them alive, even when gone with the idealist himself, or worthless when they die facing some majority "truth". The movie doesn't lack action and earthly brotherhood with your fellow man, or that should be. Has some romance without catchy parts, and have a strange flash in almost all scenes, like a private and intense sense in each of the chronologically arranged cuts. The hard-to-grasp feeling, as for today, of gentlemanly conduct, regarding human life in some circles, and at the same time, the brutal butchery developed along 4 years by both sides of the fence. I guess in ancient times was about same situation, but this time, and from then on, machinery came into scene and that allowed man to kill man quicker, from afar. Also leads us towards the fact that the man really got into flying, a dream long desired, and this flying was perfected through war, the great technology bringer. Enough said, this film worth the watch and have some good moments, as the ambiance is there, and that is more that we can say of many Hollywood, CA productions of late, or before. So long.
    8Gordon_123

    Worth it - gets better as from the second half

    The movie seems a bit slow at first. One wonders if it's going to be a realistic crude harsh war movie, as we have grown accustomed to in the last years, or a romantic poetic depiction of this folk hero/legend.

    As one gets into the film, one discovers it's both things. There are several sub themes. The jealousy and competitiveness between brothers, the strong contrasting point of views from how the German pilots lived and saw the war as compared to their infantry mud submerged counterparts, the beauty of the initial sportsmanship displayed by Richthoffen and many other airmen in their practice of war, the love story, and many more.

    Perhaps the most appealing to some of us is the gradual turn of things towards the impending tragedy, how the characters seem to express it just in the way they look at each other and how this epic sized hero, well represented by the unknown actor Tomas Koutnik, embraces his fate with a powerlessness and dignity that reflects the whole of humanity's ultimate choices when faced with the certain end: play out the role you've been assigned in this life with dignity.

    Congratulations to this director, his craftsmanship, the actors, the staff, and let me not forget specially that wonderful Lena Heady who is very sensual and sublime!
    2dean-harmse

    Soap opera writing & acting

    Being a pilot, aviation enthusiast & someone who reads everything I can about the Red Baron and WWI flying in general, I was very excited to hear there was a movie on the cards about him. For 2 years I felt like a child on Christmass eve. I couldn't wait to get my hands on this movie. In spite of the negative reviews I imported the DVD to South Africa at great cost. I was going to see it come hell or high water. I picked it up from the post office, rushed home, popped it in the DVD player and I couldn't believe my eyes. I feel robbed. Utterly robbed! I feel like going to the film makers and forcing them to do it over. I WANT MY RED BARON MOVIE!

    All this movie is, is a jump from one dramatic speech to another. And if you want to make a movie with just long dramatic dialog, you need actors who can pull it off. The acting in this movie is as bad as it gets. And the award for worst actor in the movie goes to... (drumroll) Volker Bruch for playing Lothar Von Richthofen! Basically everyone was bad. Mathias Schweighofer, Volker Bruch and Lena Headey tries too hard. They act as if they are acting. Even Joseph Fiennes, who I have a great deal of respect for, couldn't pull it off. Especially the Canadian accent. The only actor who didn't look like he was acting was Til Schweiger, but a 46 year old playing a 20 year old? More on that later.

    Acting aside, lets look at the real Manfred Von Richthofen vs the movie one. The real one didn't dream of becoming a pilot as it is told in the movie. He joined the air service, because the cavalry(where he started the war) was fast becoming obsolete. He only wanted to do his part in the war effort. In the movie he loves flying, in real life his aircraft was just a platform for his guns. He didn't do aerobatics and frowned upon pilots(like his brother) who did. He always looked respectable and made other officers button up their tunics if they were undone. In the movie he walks around with unbuttoned tunics and stretched jerseys. He didn't go to whorehouses like in the movie, he didn't shoot down Roy Brown twice, there is no evidence of a relationship between Manfred & Kate Otersdorf that here is the basis of the movie. In the movie Lanoe hawker flies a Bristol fighter, in real life he flew a DH2 in his last dogfight(a machine obsolete by then). And the list goes on.

    CG effects. Nicely done, but unrealistic. Af Albatrosses could fly like that they would be shooting down F22's over Afganistan. Those planes were built from wood and fabric and would disintegrate if they were flown like in the move. And it seems the movie makers didn't have the money to do complete dogfight scenes, because a fight just starts, then they jump to a speech again.

    The movie also jumps from scene to scene so much, that no one who doesn't know the basic history of the Red Baron would understand what is going on.

    What market did they aim for when making this movie? Its not a family movie, its too boring and complicated. Action movie? Not much action. Aviation movie? Not much flying. Biographical film? Too much fiction. Drama? Love story? Yes, but why use the Red Baron to make a love story? Why not cowboys talking to horses or poor coal miners?

    What should they have done? They should have told his story. He was a soldier, who wanted to do his part in the war. He was the highest scoring ace of WW1, who awarded himself cups for his victories until Germany ran out of silver.He wanted to be the best. His career was greatly influencedby Oswald Boelce, who is mentioned twice in the movie only. He was there when Boelce died. They should have shown the Boelce/Von Richtoven relationship. Werner Voss a 20 year old pilot(not 46), was his main rival for top ace(and good friend), who died in one of the most impressive dogfights of the war. They should have shown the dogfight. They should have shown the Baron's last flight. They basically took all that was interesting about this man and made sure that it was left out of the movie.

    All in all, the writers would have a great career in Soap operas as well as the actors.
    8elang-1

    A treat for aviation fans.

    If you're an aviation fan, you're going to love this movie. The aerial scenes of World War I era biplanes in action are truly astounding.

    The lead role of the Baron is played by Matthias Schweighöfer whose boyish good looks and magnetic smile are fully exploited to make the Red Baron impossible to dislike. The character of the Baron is portrayed as a young man of high principals who struggles to reconcile his humanity in the completely inhumane circumstances of war. He is torn between his sense of duty to his country and it's megalomaniac leadership and his conscience. Now I don't know if any of that is actually true, but it makes for a touching story nonetheless.

    Overwhelmingly I was aware that the makers of this movie wanted to transmit the message that Germans are not the stereotype so often portrayed in war movies as either emotionless auto-bots of death and destruction or blood thirsty hums. Is this done in an effort to raise public opinion of Germans (it is a German production by the way) or because audiences are growing intolerant of stereotyping and it's injurious, evil nature. I can't say, I'd like to believe the latter, but you'll certainly find the Baron and his fellow pilots all endearing characters and you'll be saddened when most of them meet their maker in the course of the story.

    The writer – director Nikolai Müllerschön isn't very loyal to historical facts in many respects. I was particularly disturbed by the portrayal of the German Emperor (Kaiser Wilhelm) as a warmongering protagonist and Paul Von Hindenburg as a foolish smiling fat man. However, in order for the character of the Baron to shine so brightly the Baron needed dark forces to nobly resist and therefore these men were transformed to serve that purpose. I strongly advise the viewer not to expect to get a history lesson from his movie.

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    • Trivia
      The financing for the film came exclusively from well-to-do private individuals living in the state of Baden-Württemberg and was raised by the Stuttgart-based film financing and production house Niama Film, which was established by director Nikolai Müllerschön with partners Thomas Reisser, Roland Pellegrino and Dan Maag.
    • Errores
      Roy Brown is shown in a Royal Flying Corps uniform, and describes himself as being in the nonexistent "Royal Canadian Flying Corps". He was in fact a Canadian serving in the British Royal Naval Air Service, and would have worn a naval officer's uniform.
    • Citas

      Emperor Wilhelm: We need men like him. I supposed we'll have to give you another promotion, Richthofen. You are a real hero. I take it the ladies are all over you.

      Manfred von Richthofen: There aren't many ladies at 10,000 feet, your Majesty.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: The Book of Eli/The Spy Next Door/Fish Tank (2010)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Open Skies
      performed by Reamonn

      composed by Reamonn

      published by b612 publishing / Reamonn Publishing

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is The Red Baron?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 10 de abril de 2008 (Alemania)
    • Países de origen
      • Alemania
      • Reino Unido
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Idiomas
      • Alemán
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Red Baron
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • República Checa
    • Productora
      • Niama Film
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • EUR 18,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 37,189
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 13,931
      • 21 mar 2010
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 2,783,332
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 46 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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