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Menschen am Sonntag

  • 1930
  • Not Rated
  • 1 घं 13 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.3/10
3.8 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Christl Ehlers in Menschen am Sonntag (1930)
Three Reasons Criterion Trailer for People On Sunday
trailer प्ले करें1:36
1 वीडियो
48 फ़ोटो
कॉमेडीड्रामारोमांस

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंTwo men and two women enjoy a pleasant Sunday at the beach amid the unending toil of the working week.Two men and two women enjoy a pleasant Sunday at the beach amid the unending toil of the working week.Two men and two women enjoy a pleasant Sunday at the beach amid the unending toil of the working week.

  • निर्देशक
    • Robert Siodmak
    • Edgar G. Ulmer
    • Rochus Gliese
  • लेखक
    • Billy Wilder
    • Curt Siodmak
    • Robert Siodmak
  • स्टार
    • Erwin Splettstößer
    • Brigitte Borchert
    • Wolfgang von Waltershausen
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.3/10
    3.8 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Robert Siodmak
      • Edgar G. Ulmer
      • Rochus Gliese
    • लेखक
      • Billy Wilder
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Robert Siodmak
    • स्टार
      • Erwin Splettstößer
      • Brigitte Borchert
      • Wolfgang von Waltershausen
    • 29यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 53आलोचक समीक्षाएं
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • वीडियो1

    People On Sunday
    Trailer 1:36
    People On Sunday

    फ़ोटो47

    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    + 42
    पोस्टर देखें

    टॉप कलाकार10

    बदलाव करें
    Erwin Splettstößer
    Erwin Splettstößer
    • Self - Taxi Driver
    Brigitte Borchert
    Brigitte Borchert
    • Self - Record Seller
    Wolfgang von Waltershausen
    Wolfgang von Waltershausen
    • Self - Wine Seller
    Christl Ehlers
    Christl Ehlers
    • Self - Extra in Films
    Annie Schreyer
    Annie Schreyer
    • Self - Model
    Kurt Gerron
    Kurt Gerron
    • Self
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Valeska Gert
    Valeska Gert
    • Self
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Heinrich Gretler
    • Self
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Moriz Seeler
    • Photo Subject at Beach
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Ernö Verebes
    Ernö Verebes
    • Self
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    • निर्देशक
      • Robert Siodmak
      • Edgar G. Ulmer
      • Rochus Gliese
    • लेखक
      • Billy Wilder
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Robert Siodmak
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
    • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

    उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं29

    7.33.8K
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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    dbdumonteil

    Die Glückliche Jahre

    In France ,Marcel Carné released his first film ,a short ,at about the same time:it was called "Nogent ou l'Eldorado du Dimanche" and it depicted the Parisians' life ,leaving the city for the banks of the Marne river ,spending a wonderful sunny day,then waiting for the next Sunday...

    Carné's work was only a short (15 min) whereas Siodmak/Ulmer's film is about one hour and a quarter long.But the subject is the same.The main difference lies in the fact that,being much longer,the script writers could introduce characters .As an user has already pointed out,its games of love and jealousy in the sun ,the picnic and the pedal boat predate Jean Renoir's "Une Partie de Campagne" by six years.But Maupassant's short story was then and "Menschen am Sonntag" is now.Its documentary side is absorbing and should appeal to historians.

    With "Menschen" ,a great director,too often forgotten or overlooked,Siodmak was born.Almost everything the man directed -not only the mind-boggling film noirs of the forties but the French ones ("Mister Flow" "Mollenard" "Pièges" ) and the German ones (this one,"Stürme der Leidenschaft" "Brennendes Geheimnis") as well- demands to be watched.
    6JoeytheBrit

    People on Sunday.

    This silent semi-documentary boasts quite a remarkable roster of young talent behind the camera: Billy Wilder, writing his first screenplay; Curt and Robert Siodmak at the helm, aided by contributions from Edgar G. Ulmer and Fred Zinnemann – all of them still in their twenties, all at the beginning of notable careers. The most interesting aspect in front of the camera is the shots of everyday life in Berlin immediately before Adolf Hitler's meteoric rise to power. Many of the people you see going about their ordinary, everyday lives – including possibly the young leads – will have participated in the war into which Hitler would plunge their country in nine short years – or been consigned to concentration camps from which they'd never emerge.

    The plot is virtually non-existent: a couple of young men take a couple of young girls to the park for a little frolicking in the lake (and something a little more intense for one couple). The characters are curiously remote, making it difficult for the audience to get to know – or like – them. They are no heroes or villains as such – although there is an air of callousness about the men – so perhaps in a way, this apparent decision to keep at the audience at arm's length can be seen as one of the film's strengths – a reflection of people the way they are (the leads were all non-actors, plucked from obscurity for their brief moment of film stardom before returning back to lives of anonymity). This sense of emotional detachment persists even when the film reaches its most sensuous moments, possibly because Wilder et al fail to decide whether they are telling us a story about people as a group or people as individuals and thus devote inadequate time and attention to both.
    8FilmFlaneur

    People on Sunday, classic on show

    If you enjoy classic silent cinema then you won't want to miss this treat. At times scenes are reminiscent of King Vidor's The Crowd, made just the year before (most especially in those moments set indoors, during which one of the couples gently bicker or the scene during which the principals first meet up for their group date); while at others the open air, carefree mood is suggestive of Renoir's masterpiece Partie de Campagne, made a decade later. But People on Sunday is a distinct work in its own right, an evocative film made by some stellar talent: the Siodmak brothers, Edgar Ulmer, Billy Wilder and Fred Zimmerman - all of whom would go on to varying degrees of success in the States after fleeing the Nazis. Their film is thus both a record of a time lost, a beautifully shot piece showing a Berlin that was soon to vanish for ever, as well as demonstrating the collaborative talents of some major figures in their early years. There is no hint of the dark years to come seen here, or the debilitating effects of run away inflation which marked the end of the Weimar Republic and led to the inexorable rise of extreme politics. People on Sunday is above such explicit social comment, unless it is political by the mere fact of focusing on ordinary people. It simply tells the tale of a group (played by non professional actors we are informed, but it hard to tell such is the quality of the performances) enjoying themselves while out on one sunny weekend day, picnicking, boating, kissing, promising more to each other and so on, interspersed with more general shots of the German people similarly at play. The skill and pleasure for the viewer today is in the way this is done, completely without ostentation, shot marvelously, everything still feeling fresh, spontaneous and genuine , and with a real feeling for place. Ironically, for this viewer at least, so much of the film seems so natural and fluid that one is more aware that is an illusion; such unforced art as this takes a great deal of time, patience and skill on the part of the participants and creators.

    If you want to see more of German cinema from this period, other than more familiar classics, then this is a real treat, being both less known and marvelously restored. The BFI DVD version has been created from several sources and is the longest version available. It also features a splendid Weill-like score, which fits the milieu like a glove and which begs issuing separately as it stands up well as a listen on its own.
    7lasttimeisaw

    a bracing urban symphony of Berlin during the interwar times

    A German silent curio heralds several future magnates of the film industry in Hollywood, PEOPLE ON Sunday is the debut feature for both its directors Robert Siodmak and Edgar G. Ulmer, with a script from a tender-age Billy Wilder and Fred Zinnemann in the camera branch. It is a bracing urban symphony of Berlin during the interwar times, confining its time-frame within a weekend, convenes a cast of five non-professional young actors (who are essentially playing themselves) and blithely breaking the boundary of studio lot and taking the story onto the streets of the metropolis, from a rush-hour Behnhof Zoo train station near the beginning to the movie's main course, a Sunday outing in Wannasee.

    The quintet are Erwin, a taxi driver, his model wife Annie, and his friend Wolfgang, a wine dealer, then Christl, a film extra Wolfgang accosts in the said train station and Brigitte, her friend, who works in a record shop. Throughout its simple plot structure, the narrative heartily proceeds with a bifurcating stratagem, a plump, honest-looking Erwin's squabble-plagued marital life with a languorous Annie in their pokey bedsit, contrasting with a louche Wolfgang's pat oscillation in wooing either Christl or Brigitte, furthermore, a tangible rift is wondrously evinced between the two flappers, Christl is the prim and proper type, who naturally spurns Wolfgang's advances in the well-orchestrated lake-swimming sequences, but when she notices that Wolfgang takes his offensive towards a more skittish Brigitte and the two become lovey-dovey, she can barely contain her pique, not only to Wolfgang, but also to her girlfriend.

    Yet, what leaves the most piquant tang is a thoroughgoing embodiment of machismo by the two male creatures, Erwin is the off-limits married man, both girls give him a decent berth, humbled by a comparatively more good-looking and athletic Wolfgang, he knows his role very well, a sausage juggler for laughter, a cavalier company, completely forgets about Annie's absence when there are new girls around, but also seemingly attests that, when sex is off the table, girls are just girls, no further communication is worth his effort. Wolfgang is more or less more readable, cops a feel whenever he can find a chance but will not get his feet wet into a stable relationship, and if a girl becomes too pushy, there is always a Sunday football match he can attend with his buddy Erwin.

    A lilting juvenilia robustly interpolates expressionistic portraiture and vignettes (there are some very impressive close-ups both in still and in motion should be attributed to the young but ingenious film crew) in all the larking and perambulating, PEOPLE ON Sunday can still turn heads not just as a chirpy comedy, but also, a counter-time escapist prose because unfortunately we cannot blot out the fact that something egregiously sinister was incubating in that touchy era and that particular country.
    8christopher-underwood

    filled with fantastic shots

    Marvellous late German silent that anticipates the Italian neo-realists, although I note some claim that this is not realistic at all and may even be showing struggling Berlin through rose tinted glasses. I'm not sure; those fantastic city sequences seem real enough and perhaps the regularly intoned opinion that Hitler was lurking in the shadows of a dispirited people, is itself a little fanciful. In any event this is a great little film filled with fantastic shots, moving street shots of and from moving trams, poetic close-ups of the young folk and a great sense of landscape at the lakeside. As usual with me and silent movies, I seem to get captions I don't need because the action is so obvious and whole sequences of back and forth dialogue left untitled. But just to watch the imagery is good enough and the little trysts, arguments, upsets and loving looks need no titles at all.

    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • ट्रिविया
      The film was a major hit when it was released in Germany in 1930. Five of the people who worked on the film went on to direct films in Hollywood: Curt Siodmak, his brother Robert Siodmak, Edgar G. Ulmer, Fred Zinnemann, and Billy Wilder.
    • गूफ़
      When the movie star picture cards are torn off the wall, the number of cards still on the wall constantly changes. Sometimes more cards are still on the wall than in the shot before, etc.
    • कनेक्शन
      Featured in Histoire(s) du cinéma: Toutes les histoires (1988)

    टॉप पसंद

    रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
    साइन इन करें

    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल12

    • How long is People on Sunday?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

    विवरण

    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 4 फ़रवरी 1930 (जर्मनी)
    • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
      • जर्मनी
    • भाषाएं
      • नोने
      • जर्मन
    • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
      • People on Sunday
    • फ़िल्माने की जगहें
      • Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten, बर्लिन, जर्मनी
    • उत्पादन कंपनियां
      • Film Studio 1929
      • Filmstudio Berlin
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    तकनीकी विशेषताएं

    बदलाव करें
    • चलने की अवधि
      • 1 घं 13 मि(73 min)
    • रंग
      • Black and White
    • ध्वनि मिश्रण
      • Silent
    • पक्ष अनुपात
      • 1.20 : 1

    इस पेज में योगदान दें

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