VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
6432
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Christian inizia a lavorare come scaffalista in un supermercato e si trova in un nuovo mondo sconosciuto: le lunghe corsie, il trambusto alle casse, i carrelli elevatori.Christian inizia a lavorare come scaffalista in un supermercato e si trova in un nuovo mondo sconosciuto: le lunghe corsie, il trambusto alle casse, i carrelli elevatori.Christian inizia a lavorare come scaffalista in un supermercato e si trova in un nuovo mondo sconosciuto: le lunghe corsie, il trambusto alle casse, i carrelli elevatori.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 12 vittorie e 11 candidature totali
Matthias Börner
- Staplerlehrling
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Robert Carlo Ceder
- Staplerlehrling
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
The story is built up well. You are put into context for a while before things get going. Some may consider this "slow", but I liked it. Nice storytelling.
I really liked the photography of the film, it was great art!
Very good actors.
I really liked the photography of the film, it was great art!
Very good actors.
One might think working in a club warehouse stocking & stacking pallets of goods to feed the consumer market would be menial & trivial, but like all things there lies hidden complexity.
To some it's a second chance; to other it's a dead end job (literally). Well acted; engaging.
Notes:
(a.) I liked the Delta Blues' Son House song's lyrics, "a true friend is hard to find."; "Yes, but bear this in mind."
(b.) I wonder to what extent jobs be displaced by robotic cashiers, inventory takers, stackers & pullers?
(c.) Sadly, for the environment, I didn't see any indication of recycling or repurposing.of anything.
Thanks to Franz Rogowski and Sandra Hueller,
I trust in every minute of this movie.
How hard is to get up. And what happens when you cannot get up. Zero effects. But leaves the deep memories.
This was an excellent movie about the importance of comradeship and the dignity of work even in a menial job in the modern mechanized and dehumanized work space. The bonding between an steady older man and a young man with a past trying to find his place with the world was very touching. In that, it reminded me of the excellent movie 'Spring Forward' with Ned Beatty and Liev Schreiber.
The physical setting is fascinating. Our guys stock the shelves of some sort of super grocery store where there are endless aisles and the stacks of crates loom 40 feet up in the air. It's like the warehouse at the end of 'Raiders of the Lost Arc', but it's just a grocery store.
Minor note -- even when the guys dream of leaving the aisles, it's to go to other isles, like Ibiza. But I suppose that's an accident of English, not something intended by the German filmmakers.
The physical setting is fascinating. Our guys stock the shelves of some sort of super grocery store where there are endless aisles and the stacks of crates loom 40 feet up in the air. It's like the warehouse at the end of 'Raiders of the Lost Arc', but it's just a grocery store.
Minor note -- even when the guys dream of leaving the aisles, it's to go to other isles, like Ibiza. But I suppose that's an accident of English, not something intended by the German filmmakers.
In Thomas Stuber's austere drama about the lives of supermarket employees in Germany, Strauss' 'The Blue Danube' conveys the lyrical magic of forklifts skating amidst the vast rows of floor-to-ceiling shelves, paying homage to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Introvert Christian (Franz Rogowski) has a chequered past but finds work as a shelfstacker at a Costco-style supermarket. He's urged to hide his tattoos and wear his name tag to maintain the company's clean-cut image. Assigned to the beverages department, Christian finds a trusty mentor in no-nonsense veteran Bruno (Peter Kurth), who schools him on the politics of 'forklift conflicts' and who patiently trains him to drive pallet jacks in between smoke breaks on the sly.
Christian's first time operating a pallet jack is a wry exercise in slapstick. Possessing a reserved charm, Rogowski makes the meek Christian likeable with a largely physical performance of bashful turns of the cheek, wistful glances and approving nods. Christian's frequent encounters at the coffee machine with Marion (Sandra Huller) from the Sweets aisle sends tongues wagging, but their innocent flirtations barely crack the ice. Upon learning of Marion's martial unhappiness, Christian's wounded vulnerability compels him to self-medicate with alcohol to numb the pain.
Stuber would have done well to play up the romance angle to give his inert film more energy and direction, but that's not the goal here. 'In The Aisles' celebrates the human connections formed in the daily grind of work. Christian and Bruno bond during smoke breaks, looking out to the world beyond from behind a wire fence, with the older Bruno reminiscing of Germany before reunification when he used to drive trucks, recalling the landmarks that were markers that told him home was close. Stuber is careful not to turn it into a battle cry against the collossus of global capitalism, but the bleakness hangs over like a dark cloud nonetheless. 'In The Aisles' handles tonal shifts well, and by adding deadpan jokes to undercut the gritty, urban gloom, its shades of light and dark are sketched with convincing realism; however, more laughs to cut through the grey wouldn't have gone astray.
Christian's first time operating a pallet jack is a wry exercise in slapstick. Possessing a reserved charm, Rogowski makes the meek Christian likeable with a largely physical performance of bashful turns of the cheek, wistful glances and approving nods. Christian's frequent encounters at the coffee machine with Marion (Sandra Huller) from the Sweets aisle sends tongues wagging, but their innocent flirtations barely crack the ice. Upon learning of Marion's martial unhappiness, Christian's wounded vulnerability compels him to self-medicate with alcohol to numb the pain.
Stuber would have done well to play up the romance angle to give his inert film more energy and direction, but that's not the goal here. 'In The Aisles' celebrates the human connections formed in the daily grind of work. Christian and Bruno bond during smoke breaks, looking out to the world beyond from behind a wire fence, with the older Bruno reminiscing of Germany before reunification when he used to drive trucks, recalling the landmarks that were markers that told him home was close. Stuber is careful not to turn it into a battle cry against the collossus of global capitalism, but the bleakness hangs over like a dark cloud nonetheless. 'In The Aisles' handles tonal shifts well, and by adding deadpan jokes to undercut the gritty, urban gloom, its shades of light and dark are sketched with convincing realism; however, more laughs to cut through the grey wouldn't have gone astray.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe training video that is shown when Christian does his forklifting course is 'Forklift Driver Klaus' - A parody of work safety films from the 80's.
- ConnessioniFeatures Staplerfahrer Klaus - Der erste Arbeitstag (2000)
- Colonne sonoreAn der schönen blauen Donau
Written by Johann Strauss
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- In the Aisles
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Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 28.394 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 922 USD
- 16 giu 2019
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 694.586 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 5 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was Un valzer tra gli scaffali (2018) officially released in India in English?
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