Ambientato nel contesto di una città futuristica profondamente divisa tra classe operaia e imprenditori urbanisti, il figlio della mente direttiva della città si innamora di una donna della ... Leggi tuttoAmbientato nel contesto di una città futuristica profondamente divisa tra classe operaia e imprenditori urbanisti, il figlio della mente direttiva della città si innamora di una donna della classe operaia, la quale predice la venuta di un salvatore ad alleviare le loro differenze... Leggi tuttoAmbientato nel contesto di una città futuristica profondamente divisa tra classe operaia e imprenditori urbanisti, il figlio della mente direttiva della città si innamora di una donna della classe operaia, la quale predice la venuta di un salvatore ad alleviare le loro differenze.
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Riepilogo
Recensioni in evidenza
I saw a clean restored version and spent a lot of time wishing I was consuming the experience in a cinema as a result. Ambitious, visionary and epic in its making - seldom can any film lay claim to having such huge influence. It must have been quite breathtaking for the paying public of the day, in their time away from the grindstone, to encounter such an alien and yet metaphorically familiar world, as the one they encountered here.
Set in a futuristic urban dystopia, high class city planner Joh Fredersen lives in the Tower of Babel around the prestigious city, which is atop its underground equivalent filled with workers who manage the machinery that support it. The actual story revolves around Joh's son Freder and the holy figure Maria trying to overcome the major split between the two parts. Director Fritz Lang and writer Thea von Harbou develop the film's plot through world building, as it's made clear from the start that the workers of the surface-level power plant toil with the equipment tirelessly year by year. Satirically, the workers are the clocks controlled by the ringleader Frederson. In a way, the film lets the viewers think about the societal differences between individuals and power without spoon-feeding the message as much as showcasing it through distinctive nations.
Admittedly, the film doesn't really develop the characters outside of their basic tropes and goals, but they're by no means bad. If anything, they're meant more to guide the events of the different classes throughout the story's progression. Freder knows all the wrong doings of tampering with technology, therefore he wishes there to be a proper balance between the thinkers and the builders, hence why he adores Maria so much. Speaking of Maria, she is the saintly guide to the workers looking for hope, but her purity comes at a price of the mad scientist Rotwag who builds a robot to replicate his loved one Hel (who ended up becoming Freder's mother). Without spoiling much, let's just say that what he does to Maria really causes the film to get suspenseful. The remaining cast are mainly easily manipulated individuals looking for the right voice to lead them.
But of course, the feature's visual style is timelessly breathtaking. Most of the special effects were huge innovations at a time of severe technological limitations, and some even work as substance depending on some given scenes (like the mythos behind the Tower of Babel). Many of the contraptions and backdrops have clearly inspired the likes of Blade Runner, Futurama and even Batman over the years, mainly through the gothic architect and abstract landscapes. Admittedly, a lot of the acting is really over the top by today's standards, but that's more attributed to the dynamic gestural performances commonplace back in the day. That, and many scenes do kind of drag on a bit for their own good. However, the narrative and message are meant to be told through these elaborate sets and melodramatic performances to gain the necessary emotional resonance for such an ambitious project like this.
In conclusion, Metropolis is a prime example of how something can stand the test of time through technical brilliance and emotional resonance based on a political allegory. It's funny how Fritz Lang believed this film to be the prediction of how the future would be perceived back in the 1920s, because it's not too far off from today. Technology is a great usage and all, but all the amazing knowledge and manual labor in the world are nothing without the necessary negotiating in case one spirals out of control, something that many corporations these days fail to realize. If you are yet to check this film out, definitely feel free to do so to remind yourself how important it is to maintain order around advanced infrastructure.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFritz Lang wanted 4,000 bald extras for the Tower of Babel sequence, but Erich Pommer could only find 1,000 willing to shave their heads. Since the scene was shot in the spring, these extras got to swelter under the hot sun shooting the exteriors as they hauled prop rocks and real tree trunks across the landscape. Some got sunburns on their scalps from the lengthy shoot. After shooting, Lang ordered the shot run through the optical multiplier to make the 1,000 extras seem like the 4,000 he had originally wanted.
- BlooperWhen Freder and Josaphat are climbing down into the miner's city, Freder is barefoot. When they are taking the children up the stairs, he has shoes again.
- Curiosità sui creditiRestoration based on the version in the Filmmuseum Munich and material preserved in the Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv
- Versioni alternativeA version restored by the German Democratic Republic in the eighties runs 115 minutes (still shown on German TV sometimes).
- ConnessioniEdited into Il volo (1975)
I più visti
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 6.000.000 DEM (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.236.166 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 19.386 USD
- 14 lug 2002
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 1.353.679 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 33min(153 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Silent(original release)
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1






