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Estasi

Titolo originale: Song Without End
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 21min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
1021
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Capucine and Dirk Bogarde in Estasi (1960)
Official Trailer
Riproduci trailer3: 57
1 video
57 foto
EpicPeriod DramaBiographyDramaMusic

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe romantic story of Hungarian pianist Franz Liszt (Sir Dirk Bogarde), whose scandalous love affair forced him to abandon his adoring audiences.The romantic story of Hungarian pianist Franz Liszt (Sir Dirk Bogarde), whose scandalous love affair forced him to abandon his adoring audiences.The romantic story of Hungarian pianist Franz Liszt (Sir Dirk Bogarde), whose scandalous love affair forced him to abandon his adoring audiences.

  • Regia
    • Charles Vidor
    • George Cukor
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Oscar Millard
    • Leola Wendorff
  • Star
    • Dirk Bogarde
    • Capucine
    • Geneviève Page
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,1/10
    1021
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Charles Vidor
      • George Cukor
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Oscar Millard
      • Leola Wendorff
    • Star
      • Dirk Bogarde
      • Capucine
      • Geneviève Page
    • 22Recensioni degli utenti
    • 4Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 1 Oscar
      • 2 vittorie e 3 candidature totali

    Video1

    Song Without End
    Trailer 3:57
    Song Without End

    Foto57

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    + 51
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    Interpreti principali24

    Modifica
    Dirk Bogarde
    Dirk Bogarde
    • Franz Liszt
    Capucine
    Capucine
    • Princess Carolyne
    Geneviève Page
    Geneviève Page
    • Countess Marie
    Patricia Morison
    Patricia Morison
    • George Sand
    Ivan Desny
    Ivan Desny
    • Prince Nicholas
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Grand Duchess
    Lou Jacobi
    Lou Jacobi
    • Potin
    Albert Rueprecht
    Albert Rueprecht
    • Prince Felix Lichnowsky
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Chelard
    Lyndon Brook
    Lyndon Brook
    • Richard Wagner
    Walter Rilla
    Walter Rilla
    • Archbishop
    Hans Unterkircher
    • Czar
    Erland Erlandsen
    • Thalberg
    • (as E. Erlandsen)
    Alexander Davion
    Alexander Davion
    • Chopin
    • (as Alex Davion)
    Katherine Squire
    Katherine Squire
    • Anna Liszt
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • Emissary
    • (scene tagliate)
    George Blagoi
    George Blagoi
    • Audience Member
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Felix Dvorak
    • Komparsenrolle
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Charles Vidor
      • George Cukor
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Oscar Millard
      • Leola Wendorff
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti22

    6,11K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7bkoganbing

    An Incurable Romantic

    Franz Liszt back in the day was maybe the first popular musical icon. Since we have no phonograph records of what he sounded like on the piano we only have his music to judge him by today. Good thing he wrote a lot of it.

    A Liszt concert back then if played for a mass audience was something like the reception that Elvis and The Beatles got back in their day. It aroused the jealousy of a lot of Liszt's contemporaries, but they respected his talent.

    Dirk Bogarde is a capable and charismatic Liszt who had a weakness for married women. He ran off with one and had a couple of kids by her and then seduces a royal countess. The two women in question are played by Genevieve Page and Capucine.

    Dirk and Cappy have a whole lot of hurdles to overcome before they can be happy, put there by the Romanov family and the Catholic Church, but it does sort of work itself out in the end.

    My favorite performance in the film is that of Martita Hunt who plays a dowager German princess who offers Liszt employment when he needs it.

    The film only covers a small portion of Franz Liszt's life, still it's a worthwhile biographical study.
    6adamshl

    Less of Liszt

    Given the fact that this biopic is about one of the great classical composers, it's rather perplexing that so much of the music is by others. Even with those by Liszt, there are many of his transcriptions rather than original compositions.

    I was expecting a comprehensive presentation of Liszt in a film devoted to his life and creative work. Less of interest were works by Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and others. The results looks like the film makers may have lacked complete confidence that a movie featuring compositions exclusively by Liszt would be that attractive to viewers.

    In the event that's the case, it's no wonder the critical and public rating of this film is less than excellent. What's notable about it is the exquisite piano performance of Jorge Bolet on the soundtrack, the rich cinematography of James Wong Howe, and the flavorful performances by a talented cast headed by Dirk Bogarde.
    9edwagreen

    Song Without End is A Memorable Musical Biography ****

    Opulent film is terrific with Dirk Bogarde playing Franz Liszt in a totally memorable performance. Capucine, as the Princess Carolyne, and Genevieve Page, as the abandoned mistress, were truly terrific here as well as a fine supporting performance by Martita Hunt, as the Czar's sympathetic sister. Hunt literally made a career of playing strong, erudite women.

    The set decorations here are phenomenal, they're on par with the great 1944 film "Wilson."

    The music is magnificent although we could have done without knowing about the friendship between Liszt and the anti-Semite Richard Wagner. Another flaw is the miscasting of Lou Jacobi as Bogarde's manager. Jacobi sounded like he came out of the Catskills. This film for Jacobi came after his super performance, the year before, in the beloved "The Diary of Anne Frank." (Happy Birthday Lou as you turn 95 on Dec. 28th.)

    The first part of the film deals with Liszt's career. His playing in concerts in various European countries was remarkable. The second part deals with his ill-fated love with the Countess Cathryne of Lichtenstein.

    While we see that Liszt entered the priesthood when his proposed marriage to Cathryne was rejected, we really can't tell if Cathryne became a nun. I imagine no since she was still technically married in the eyes of the church. Nonetheless, we have a powerful, beautifully acted film. Too bad that Totentanz, a Liszt masterpiece, was not played here. I had to know that piece of grand music in a required music course at college. Like the movie, Totentanz was a masterful piece.
    6Hint523

    70% piano playing, take that as you will

    My second Charles Vidor biopic in what could be called the Classical Cinematic Universe: Franz Liszt plays a supporting role in the earlier made Chopin biopic "A Song to Remember" and here Chopin and his mistress George Sand get a prominent scene in the story of Franz Liszt. There's a reboot of this universe waiting to happen if only more people cared about 19th century composers.

    What the movie is, which will polarize viewers, is a thorough opportunity to experience music by great composers as they might in the mid-1800s. No less than 40 musical interludes occur, and unlike today's music biopics, these are not small moments, they nearly all play uninterrupted! This makes for a bloated runtime well over 2 hours, but a rare immersive opportunity to sit and listen to an actor portraying a master performer/composer as a recreation of their era. Read the reviews on IMDb and you'll see viewers either hate this or love this depending on their passion for the music itself. And the movie feels to be 70% concerts, which makes an inevitably weary experience that sacrifices a more deft plot.

    Peculiarly, the movie features startlingly low percentage music by Liszt himself. It is a well done plot point that Liszt was a champion of his peers, and helped Chopin, Wagner, and others reach fame they wouldn't have without a master performer like Liszt showcasing their work. But this is intentional to the story. The finest example is a scene where Liszt is playing Chopin on the piano in the background, while Chopin's lover and Liszt's lover discuss their merits as composers vs. performers in the front of the scene. Cinematic subtext to perfection. The Liszt inner debate of whether he was a superior composer or performer is a major plot point. I love these components of the plot, for they shed light on who Liszt was in a way that a Wikipedia article never could. And yet, they're overshadowed by the main draw.

    The main story is about Liszt's multiple lovers and the challenging decisions that come with this. It's 1960, so discussion of love, sex, and marriage is very reserved. Only 15 years later, Lisztomania has Roger Daltery playing Liszt as a sex-fueled rocker; this one makes his romances a true conflict of faith. It's great material, but definitely dated in its more calm approach.

    Director Charles Vidor died early into production, and was replaced by legendary director George Cukor, who it appears was determined to stay within Vidor's vision of a music biography. The result is something slightly authorless: it's a grand period epic, with little outstanding choices, give or a take a few cool shots. If this were released today, it would get roasted for being thin on story and heavy on music sequences without enough subtext behind them.

    The film is shot in Cinemascope but the DVD version I have is shoddy at best. This is a perfect example of an old movie that may get forgotten by time and will not get the 4K restoration reserved for classics such as Gone With the Wind, or Criterion essentials of the highest caliber. Makes you wonder what movies will disappear in time. Had I not been studying the work of Chopin & Liszt, I would have never watched this, especially given it wasn't well reviewed to begin with. And yet, despite its flaws, there is plenty to glean from it, mostly for classical piano buffs, but perhaps for others as well.

    (Side note: I do wish I could access a list of all the names of the pieces, they don't always make an effort to tell you what is what. It isn't mentioned in the film, though I learned in my own research, that Liszt's championing of Beethoven, the equivalent of a celebrity endorsing an under-appreciated artist today, is what has elevated Beethoven to superstardom. That could be a movie in of itself)
    7lee_eisenberg

    when you learn classical music from the Looney Tunes, there's a certain way that you view these movies

    People in the 21st century might not know who Ferenc "Franz" Liszt was. He was a Hungarian composer. Probably his most noted work was Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, which often appears in cartoons (and got played by Daffy Duck and Donald Duck in the dueling pianos scene in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit").

    Charles Vidor's "Song Without End" (finished by George Cukor after Vidor died during production) looks at a period of Liszt's life. It sounds as though his scandalous personal life became as famous as his music. Sure happens with a lot of musicians.

    Anyway, Dirk Bogarde plays Liszt, and Capucine plays the princess with whom he fell in love. Their love affair was what you might expect (but make no mistake, Capucine was a real babe). However, my interpretation of this movie got colored by the use of the music in cartoons. Richard Wagner is a character in the movie, and we hear the Pilgrims' Chorus from Wagner's Tannhäuser; I recognized the tune from the scene in Chuck Jones's "What's Opera, Doc?" where Bugs dresses as a Rhinemaiden to fool Elmer. I bet that my generation learned most of the high-brow culture (opera and literature) from the Looney Tunes without knowing that it was a spoof.

    Anyway, it's an OK movie, not great. I guess that you could put it on your, ahem, Liszt of movies to see.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Charles Vidor had completed about 15 percent of this movie when he died of a heart attack on June 4, 1959. Sir Dirk Bogarde later recalled that he was "secretly relieved" by Vidor's death, since he and his co-star, Capucine had been treated badly by the short-tempered director. Vidor would often scream at Capucine to relax, and at one point, Bogarde recalled, "shook her like a dead cat." Vidor was replaced by George Cukor, who got along much better with his stars, and was more of an "actor's director."
    • Blooper
      Grand Duchess make reference to "Ukraine" in one scene. The term was not in wide use in the 1840s, especially not among Russian nobility.
    • Citazioni

      Countess Marie: I met Franz at a musical party. I remember he played a ballade in A-flat major by Chopin. I thought I'd never seen anything as beautiful as Franz looked when he sat at the piano. I... I wanted to cry. He watched me as he played; Franz never fails to notice a pretty woman in his audience. Afterward, he followed me into the hall. I remember he said, "May I escort you somewhere, madame?" And I said, "Yes." And he said, "Where?" And I said, "Paradise." He didn't smile - he said, "I'll call a carriage."

      Princess Carolyne: Did he?

      Countess Marie: What?

      Princess Carolyne: Drive you there - to paradise?

      Countess Marie: [a pause, and a meaningful look as she turns to leave the room] He doesn't know the road, madame.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Film Profile: Dirk Bogarde (1961)
    • Colonne sonore
      Liebestraum, piano, nr 3, op. 62
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Franz Liszt

      Performed by Jorge Bolet (piano)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 5 settembre 1960 (Regno Unito)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Song Without End
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Berndorf Theater, Vienna, Austria
    • Azienda produttrice
      • William Goetz Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 21 minuti
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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