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Swing Kids

  • 1993
  • PG-13
  • 1h 52min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
18 k
MA NOTE
Christian Bale, Robert Sean Leonard, Frank Whaley, and Tushka Bergen in Swing Kids (1993)
A group of teens adores forbidden music in Nazi Germany just before the outbreak of World War II.
Lire trailer2:16
1 Video
76 photos
DrameMusique

Juste avant le début de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, de jeunes allemands revendiquent leur engouement pour de la musique interdite par les nazis.Juste avant le début de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, de jeunes allemands revendiquent leur engouement pour de la musique interdite par les nazis.Juste avant le début de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, de jeunes allemands revendiquent leur engouement pour de la musique interdite par les nazis.

  • Réalisation
    • Thomas Carter
  • Scénario
    • Jonathan Marc Feldman
  • Casting principal
    • Robert Sean Leonard
    • Christian Bale
    • Frank Whaley
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    18 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Thomas Carter
    • Scénario
      • Jonathan Marc Feldman
    • Casting principal
      • Robert Sean Leonard
      • Christian Bale
      • Frank Whaley
    • 125avis d'utilisateurs
    • 19avis des critiques
    • 39Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    Official Trailer

    Photos76

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    Rôles principaux75

    Modifier
    Robert Sean Leonard
    Robert Sean Leonard
    • Peter
    Christian Bale
    Christian Bale
    • Thomas
    Frank Whaley
    Frank Whaley
    • Arvid
    Barbara Hershey
    Barbara Hershey
    • Frau Muller
    Tushka Bergen
    Tushka Bergen
    • Evey
    David Tom
    David Tom
    • Willi
    Julia Stemberger
    • Frau Linge
    Jayce Bartok
    Jayce Bartok
    • Otto
    Noah Wyle
    Noah Wyle
    • Emil
    Johan Leysen
    Johan Leysen
    • Herr Schumler
    Douglas Roberts
    Douglas Roberts
    • Hinz
    Martin Clunes
    Martin Clunes
    • Bannfuhrer
    Jessica Hynes
    Jessica Hynes
    • Helga
    • (as Jessica Stevenson)
    Carl Brincat
    • HJ Thug
    Mary Fogarty
    • Mama Klara
    Karel Belohradský
    • Bismarck Owner
    Peter Baikie
    • Bismarck Bandleader
    Jennifer Chamberlain
    • Swing Girl with Thomas
    • Réalisation
      • Thomas Carter
    • Scénario
      • Jonathan Marc Feldman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs125

    6,818K
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    Avis à la une

    6JackCerf

    A Useful Approach

    The central characters in this movie are unpolitical teenagers who have no concern with the larger political issues of Naziism and simply want to enjoy themselves. Their only perspective is that Nazis are stuffy, conformist jerks and no fun at all. For this reason, a number of mainstream critics (among them Ebert and Berardinelli) trashed the picture for trivializing the crimes and horrors of the Third Reich. These critics, I think, miss the point.

    The value of the movie is precisely that it is trivial. There is no hindsight. The audience, like the characters, is caught up in the everydayness of everyday life in a totalitarian state. The Nazis are the government, and as far as anyone can see in 1938-39 they are going to go on being the government forever. The war hasn't happened yet. The Swastika flag flying over every post office and courthouse doesn't give them a little shudder of horror; it's as normal as the Stars and Stripes is to us. All sensible, respectable people who aren't Nazis themselves go along with the Nazis, because they have no reason not to.

    Auschwitz hasn't happened yet either. Sure, there are concentration camps out there somewhere, but that has nothing to do with normal, ordinary people who behave themselves. Unless you happen to know a Jew or a political dissident yourself, what the government is doing to people like that isn't your problem.

    The teen-aged lead characters find themselves in opposition and in trouble, not because they have any principled objections to the government, but simply because they find respectable culture boring and want to amuse themselves. The first reaction of authority, in the person of Kenneth Branagh's kindly Gestapo man, is that all they need is a good talking to, a second chance, and a little constructive guidance in the Hitler Youth and they'll grow up to be good citizens. He's fifty percent right; Thomas does respond positively to the comradeship and healthy outdoor activity he finds there.

    The ultimate choices made by the two boys are governed not by principle but by their personal situations. Thomas has been rebelling against his cold, pompous, wealthy father, whom he loathes, and he ultimately decides that being a dutiful Nazi and denouncing the old man to the Gestapo offers him much better revenge than dancing to illegal jazz records. Peter recoils from the Hitler Youth (and from his former friend) because his own father had disappeared, perhaps into the camps, after the Nazis took power several years earlier.

    There's's no hindsight in the movie's perspective, and no heroism. Instead, it gives us ordinary, everyday people dealing with ordinary everyday life as they find it, from the viewpoint of a high school student. The movie leads the adolescents who are its target audience to ask themselves an unpleasant question -- would they be any different, any more politically aware, if they were in the same situation? Indeed, would they even realize it if they were actually in the same situation now?

    The implicit answer is that they probably wouldn't be all that different from ordinary non-political German teenagers in 1938, minding their own business, going about their own lives, and at most trying to carve a little more personal space than the government wants to give them. That's disconcerting and not at all flattering, which is why Swing Kids is worth watching.
    Tin Man-5

    Uneven, but powerful

    Four German teenage boys (Leonard, Bale, Whaley, and Batrok), living under Nazy reign in World War II, secretly play Swing music, American stuff that's been forbidden, and embrace the concepts of the musical heritage. But this is clearly an act of rebellion, so they must do it in secret clubs at night, avoiding the Gestapo. Their relationships and the outcomes are the study of this film, which is both uneven and, ultimately, very powerful.

    Roger Ebert detested this film for the fact that, to him, is unclear in it's message. He feels that the motives behind these teen's rebellion are stupid: It seems as if Hitler hadn't banned Swing music, then they would have thought that he was a swell guy.

    Actually, this observation on Mr. Ebert's behalf might be the film's point. They thought Hitler was a loser because of he didn't let them play their music. Through this fact, they learn that there is a much bigger problem here, and they know that they can't conform to it. So how do they rebell? Through the music that they cherish.

    Along the way, two of the boys, Leonard and Bale, are forced to join the Gestapo. Leonard doesn't embrace the teachings, but Bale is slowly brainwashed into conforming. Whaley is a cripple, and he therefore observes the Nazis from a different position. He soon begins to despise his two friends for their uniforms. While his character might be an arrogant jerk, it is clear that he's got a better idea about the evil that's going on than anyone else. Bartok is just sort of along for the ride, just wanting to hang out with his friends and play in his music...oblivious to what happens with the Jews or Nazis.

    So here we have four chief characters that pretty much represent probably the most basic attitudes of German citizens during the war: Brainwashed, aware, torn in between, and indifferent. The characters are well acted, and the balance and chemisty between them work. The message at the end is very clear and VERY powerful....I am often reminded of its subtle excellence, though I haven't seen it in a good while.

    Unfortunately, the film itself is uneven. Almost too much time is spent on the swing music itself. So much that it takes away from the message of the film. The music should have only served as a backdrop, and endless scenes of dancing almost threaten to take away from the impact of the theme. "Almost" is the key word. All in all, this is a most intriguing film. Kenneth Branagh appears unbilled, as a central Gestapo character.

    *** out of ****
    6silvergirl606

    Good moments, could have been better

    I really don't understand a lot of these reviewers. The movie far from trivializes anything about the Nazis, it simply tries to portray a moment before the bloodiest war in history on a smallish scale.

    Would it be better to just have a movie that says "Nazis are bad and they killed six million Jews."? No, because that wouldn't be a movie.

    It's like when people complained that a mini-series about Hitler's life that was supposed to be shown on TV would "humanize Hitler". Well, news flash, he WAS a human. That's the worst part, a human could do that sort of thing. What good is it to call evil-doers monsters and then leave it at that? When "Swing Kids" succeeds is when it's portraying the conflicts of youth as their country goes mad. Can anyone honestly say they feel NO sympathy for those who were forced to join the Hitler youth? It's easy to say you would have done different.

    And the idea that the music being key somehow trivializes the events of WWII, um, it's based on an ACTUAL subculture, swing kids. There were lots of them and at first they were fairly lacking in politics, but later in the 40s when they were cracked down on more so by the Nazis some were more active.

    It's not like the movie makers pulled the concept of kids, Nazis and swing out of their asses, which is what people seem to think.

    And at least it was something, at least it wasn't giving in totally. Remember these were young kids, high-school age, nobody can expect them all to be Sophie Scholl.

    Where "Swing Kids" lacks is its occasional excessive heavy-handedness. The ending is a bit excessive, something more subtle would have been better.

    But as I say, the conflicts between the three main leads are fantastic and bring up questions of what you would do in such circumstances. I think the boys's indifference in respect to the Jew being beat up in the beginning of the movie is a good touch. This is NOT about the holocaust, because it was just starting and was largely unknown at the time. I hate when people can't lose what they know to watch a movie.

    I recommend everyone to read some swing kids history, just look them up, it makes the movie much better and more interesting to know the facts.

    This is a fairly good movie with very good acting, great great music and costumes, a great story that was influenced by deeply interesting history, and too much heavy handedness.

    But seriously, who can resist a movie put out by Disney that includes the line of dialog "You're turning into a f*cking Nazi!"?
    Burgundy

    Excellent insight on the youth in Germany...

    This movie does a great job of showing a different angle on the WW2 time period. The struggles the youth of Germany went through during that time were portrayed very well. People complain that this movie doesn't show the horror of the holocaust and the awful persecution the Jews faced, but that is not what it's trying to do! We all read or hear about what the Nazis did to the Jews (& other minorities) and think that the Germans must have been horrible people to have even gone along with this. But this shows how the propaganda they were constantly fed--as well as the activities & sense of belonging the HJ (Hitler Jungen) experienced--could slowly twist their minds to the Nazi way of thinking. One of the excellent things about this movie is how it shows how the main characters change. The changes in Peter & Thomas come very slow and natural, and only when you get to the end (and maybe re-watch it) do you realize how drastically they have changed their views. (Thomas especially)

    There were some not-so-great things about the movie, like some characters or scenes which, when you think back, seem to have been included for an unknown reason. But the good points of the movie out-weigh the minor nit-picks. The swing music and dancing in the movie was awesome, and I thought all the characters were acted very well by the actors. They did a good job of showing the confusion that the young Germans must have felt, not knowing who was right. All in all, I really enjoyed this movie, and I think it makes you think as well.
    Adaleide

    Some people have obviously missed the point of this movie

    Ok for you people who refer to all the Germans as "worthless human beings" and talk about how this movie didn't focus on the holocaust, etc....WAKE UP! The point of this movie was to give another perspective on the war. Not all Germans were souless killers. Throughout the movie you could see the consciences of the main characters being pushed and pulled about what was happening. Over here in Western culture, everything is portrayed in black and white: all the Germans were completely evil, and we were the good ones. No one is denying that the Germans committed some horrific atrocities, but there were some who resisted doing those crimes, and others who actually believed that they were morally in the right because of centuries of ingrained anti-semitism. Geez, North America was anti-semitic then too! Swing Kids looks at Germany from the inside, and the different forces that were at work. Everyone knows what happened during the Holocaust....this movie wasn't about that. I think people should look at all different viewpoints before classifying all the people in a certain group (ie all of the German nation) into one cubbyhole of evil.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Despite the fact that Kenneth Branagh plays a major role in this movie, he is uncredited. Reportedly, Branagh refused to be credited out of concern that he would be billed above Robert Sean Leonard, Christian Bale, and the other boys, whom Branagh proclaimed were the real stars of the film.
    • Gaffes
      At the end of the film, when Willy is running after Peter and stops, there is clearly nothing at Willy's feet. Later, after being told "Swing Heil", he grabs an umbrella on a wet poster at his feet that clearly wasn't there before.
    • Citations

      Arvid: I would rather belong to any one... ANYONE, than belong to the Nazis like you do.

      Thomas Berger: That's because you have everything backwards. Nazis go anywhere they want, do anything they want, everyone gets out of our way.

      Arvid: Quiz time. Got your glasses on.

      Thomas Berger: What?

      Arvid: It means you don't know who your friends are.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Mad Dog and Glory/El Mariachi/Rich in Love/The Last Days of Chez Nous (1993)
    • Bandes originales
      Life Goes to a Party
      Written by Harry James and Benny Goodman

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Swing Kids?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 juillet 1993 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Rebeldes del swing
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Prague, République tchèque
    • Sociétés de production
      • Hollywood Pictures
      • Touchwood Pacific Partners 1
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 12 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 5 632 086 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 1 967 957 $US
      • 7 mars 1993
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 5 632 086 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 52min(112 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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