Undine travaille comme historienne donnant des conférences sur le développement urbain de Berlin. Mais quand l'homme qu'elle aime la quitte, le mythe antique la rattrape. Undine doit tuer l'... Tout lireUndine travaille comme historienne donnant des conférences sur le développement urbain de Berlin. Mais quand l'homme qu'elle aime la quitte, le mythe antique la rattrape. Undine doit tuer l'homme qui la trahit et retourner à l'eau.Undine travaille comme historienne donnant des conférences sur le développement urbain de Berlin. Mais quand l'homme qu'elle aime la quitte, le mythe antique la rattrape. Undine doit tuer l'homme qui la trahit et retourner à l'eau.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 9 victoires et 20 nominations au total
Avis à la une
Our Undine (the terrific Paula Beer) is a historian and part-time tour guide for the city's planning bureau. By happenstance, a local industrial diver, Christoph (Franz Rogowski), catches one of her lectures and a relationship begins. As expected, the pair's union is an unusual one. It's not long before Christoph takes Undine for a dive in what he assumes will be HIS comfort zone. There are some beautiful underwater sequences in the movie and they subtly reveal Undine's true nature.
To his credit, Petzhold (who also wrote the screenplay) never underlines to the viewer that this is an ancient fairy tale. The viewer is expected to participate. The lectures which Undine gives about the emergence of a unified Berlin after the fall of the Soviet empire are all about uniting the two different world views, and can be read as symbolic of the central relationship here. Beer is entrancing and again shows why she is one of Europe's rising young stars (she won multiple awards for her performance). Rogowski, who teamed with Beer memorably in the Petzhold's previous TRANSIT, has a burly but, vulnerable masculinity. Hans Fromm's cinematography is fine and the classical musical selections are appropriate (with an assist from the Bee Gees!).
Still, like his other outright fantasy, YELLA, there is something a bit missing from Petzhold's script. That film took it's cues from the cult classic CARNIVAL OF SOULS (1962), and here, some may detect a certain kinship with Val Lewton's masterpiece CAT PEOPLE (1942). Original legend and possible homage aside, UNDINE has to work on its own as a drama, and on that level it's slightly disappointing. The various threads, as good as they are at times, never quite fully connect. UNDINE is certainly worth seeing, but, it's not quite up to Petzhold's high standards.
The film opens with a very uncomfortable break-up scene between Johannes (Jacob Matschentz) and Undine (Ms. Beer). When he says they are done, she responds, "If you leave me, I'll have to kill you. You know that." While researching the name Undine, I stumbled upon the 1811 German fairy tale of a water nymph Friedrich de la Motte Fouquet, which clearly inspired Petzold. The story has some similarities to "The Little Mermaid", itself a Danish fairy tale originally written by Hans Christian Anderson. It helps to know all of this upfront to prevent some of the frustration that goes with deciphering what is real and what is imagined.
As one would imagine, water is a recurring element throughout - beginning with Undine's chance and unusual café meet-cute with Christoph (Mr. Rogowski). The two find themselves attracted and connected after being drenched. Christoph is an industrial diver, so water is a part of his life ... as is 'Big Guenther', the legendary giant catfish he spots while on a job. Undine is a historian who holds sessions for tourists during which she recounts the architectural evolution and urban sprawl of Berlin over the past centuries, by utilizing scale models of the different eras. We also learn that "Berlin" means marsh, or a dry place in the marsh ... yet another water-related aspect.
Ms. Beer, who was so good in FRANTZ (2016) and NEVER LOOK AWAY (2018) continues her fine work, and reuniting with her TRANSIT co-star, Mr. Rogowski (VICTORIA, 2015) works out beautifully, as they have a nice rapport. Mr. Petzold's film has a supernatural element and is dreamlike at times, and though I've used the "fairy tale" description, it's clearly a very high concept film for grown-ups ... and there is enough humor ("Stayin' Alive by the Bee Gees) to offset the doomed relationships and Undine's return to her natural element. It's quite a trip for those who are up for it.
In theaters and On Demand June 4, 2021.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAt the 70th Berlin International Film Festival, Paula Beer won the Silver Bear for Best Actress for her performance as Undine.
- GaffesWhen Christoph knocks down the aquarium in the restaurant, the glass breaks in many tiny peaces. It appears to be tempered glass, a glass type not suitable for an aquarium.
- Citations
Undine Wibeau: Modern architectural theory teaches us that the design of a building can be derived from the best possible realization of its intended use. Form follows function.
Undine Wibeau: In the centre of Berlin now stands a museum built in the 21st century in the form of an 18th-century ruler's palace.
Undine Wibeau: The deceptive part lies in the hypothesis that this makes no real difference which is the same as claiming that progress is impossible.
Undine Wibeau: Quite a statement, even if one doesn't agree.
- Bandes originalesConcerto in D minor, BWV 974, 2. Adagio
Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
Performed by Víkingur Heiðar Ólafsson
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Undine?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 78 689 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 27 065 $US
- 6 juin 2021
- Montant brut mondial
- 1 170 267 $US
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1