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Le lacrime amare di Petra Von Kant

Titolo originale: Die bitteren Tränen der Petra von Kant
  • 1972
  • VM14
  • 2h 4min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
11.978
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Margit Carstensen and Hanna Schygulla in Le lacrime amare di Petra Von Kant (1972)
The Bitter Tears Of Petra Von Kant: I Don't Regret It (US)
Riproduci clip1:10
Guarda The Bitter Tears Of Petra Von Kant: I Don't Regret It (US)
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99+ foto
DrammaDramma psicologicoRomanticismo

Uno stilista di moda abbandona una relazione sadomaso con la sua assistente per una storia d'amore con una bellissima giovane donna.Uno stilista di moda abbandona una relazione sadomaso con la sua assistente per una storia d'amore con una bellissima giovane donna.Uno stilista di moda abbandona una relazione sadomaso con la sua assistente per una storia d'amore con una bellissima giovane donna.

  • Regia
    • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Star
    • Margit Carstensen
    • Hanna Schygulla
    • Katrin Schaake
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,5/10
    11.978
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Star
      • Margit Carstensen
      • Hanna Schygulla
      • Katrin Schaake
    • 42Recensioni degli utenti
    • 77Recensioni della critica
    • 73Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 3 vittorie e 3 candidature totali

    Video1

    The Bitter Tears Of Petra Von Kant: I Don't Regret It (US)
    Clip 1:10
    The Bitter Tears Of Petra Von Kant: I Don't Regret It (US)

    Foto115

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    Interpreti principali6

    Modifica
    Margit Carstensen
    Margit Carstensen
    • Petra von Kant
    • (as Margit Cartensen)
    Hanna Schygulla
    Hanna Schygulla
    • Karin Thimm
    Katrin Schaake
    Katrin Schaake
    • Sidonie von Grasenabb
    Eva Mattes
    Eva Mattes
    • Gabriele von Kant
    Gisela Fackeldey
    Gisela Fackeldey
    • Valerie von Kant
    Irm Hermann
    Irm Hermann
    • Marlene
    • Regia
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti42

    7,511.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    Bishonen

    Caustic, Venomous But Strangely Poignant

    The one-apartment setting for this film creates a very appropriate sense of claustrophobia and confinement. Fassbinder and actress Margin Carstensen masterfully detail the progression of Petra's deterioration. The schematic framework of this film is not apparent at first; nothing initially indicates Petra's vulnerability and neuroses which makes her ultimate psychic annihilation more poignant. Fassbinder's view of human relationships was egocentric and borders on the cynical---however his work resonates because the approach is so unsentimental and Carstensen is unafraid to make the character unsympathetic, even pathetic as she pines for the return of an absent lover (Schygulla) in the devastating latter half of the film.

    The production design and cinematography (by the great Michael Ballhaus-"Bram Stoker's Dracula") are magnificent in that instead of creating great vistas or otherworldly visions, they remain firmly entrenched in a context of confinement and claustrophobia. The artifice (note the outlandish outfits!!!) and overhyped hothouse atmosphere of the film contribute to a feeling of imprisonment; Petra is trapped by her loneliness and neuroses. There's no freedom, no exits, no light, no room to breathe.

    The final shot, overlaid with the rock song "The Great Pretender" on the soundtrack, haunts.

    A difficult, challenging, at times tedious work, with characters who are human in some very unpleasant ways. Not for an action-movie crowd or people who dig Spielbergian easy answers. "Die Bitteren Tränen der Petra von Kant" deserves applause for walking so unflinchingly on the dark and lonely side of the street.
    9Mefisto-4

    Typical Fassbinder film

    This is a typical Fassbinder movie: very strong psychological characterisation of the main characters, lot of talking, nearly no action. All the scenes of the film are located in the bedroom of Petra von Kant, a rich fashion designer. In that bedroom people are discussing life, love, ambition, frustration, despair and so on. So, a lot of talking although one of the most important characters does not say one word. It takes some effort of the spectator to follow the film but it is quite an interesting film. You should be glad if you see one such a film a month.
    8richardchatten

    The Snake Pit

    The most ironic aspect of this film is that although directed by a gay director and depicting a woman tormented by frustrated Sapphic passion is that it is actually based on a heterosexual relationship, sort of.

    Fassbinder was in fact bisexual and treated the women in his life extremely differently, notably two actresses who both feature in the film: Eva Mattes, to whom he was invariably a model of quiet consideration, and Irm Hermann, who he treated cruelly, invariably giving her the worst parts in his films, perfectly demonstrated by the wordless role of Margit Carstenson's maid who spends the whole proceedings silently looking on with the air of one who has seen it all before.
    8the red duchess

    A searing reminder of what a galvanising experience cinema could be.

    The archetypal mid-period Fassbinder film of the kind so lovingly pastiched/parodied in Francois Ozon's 'Water Falling on Burning Rocks'. Like much of his early work, the film is based on his own play, which 'limitation' Fassbinder compounds by refusing to open it out - imprisonment and immobility being central Fassbinder themes, as well as providing the metaphors that theatre provokes - role-playing, dual/multiple identities, staging.

    The film is like a prison drama - its four acts never leave Petra's preposterously ornate bedroom, filled with dolls, mannequins (she is a fashion designer), and the kind of obtrusive decor that allows Fassbinder to compose intricate multiple-frame tableaux - and neither does Petra. In the 'real' world of the film, she is a jet-setter, attending celebrity shows, photo-shoots, but in the film world, she is paralysed, stuck not only in this bedroom, but in a circumscribed series of poses and movements, not to mention stock phrases and attitudes.

    if she makes any progress at all, it is a negative one, as she declines from empty rhetoric about freedom to a horrified admission of her own self-entrapment, appropriately visualised in the bars of her bed-frame, and the mirror that reflects her back on herself, consumes her, like Narcissus, sucked into her own self-love, her gestures at role-play doomed attempts at consolidating her own egotistical power.

    What's worse, other characters seem as imprisoned as her, but they can come and go, even if they are doomed to return, condemned to the same relations with Petra, even if power-relations shift. Only one character seems to break free - Karin - and that is by using, humiliating and ditching Petra. Like 'All about my mother', 'Bitter Tears' is a loose remake of 'All About Eve' - Petra is even paying alimony to a certain 'Joseph Mankiewicz'. Karin is the rising star who submits herself to an elder mentor for as long as it suits before dumping her when she has taken what she needs. Of course, Fassbinder elides any Hollywood melodrama inherent in such a set-up: each 'act' involves a large time gap, so that Karin's turning nasty seems disturbingly abrupt.

    Stylistically, the film's closed world is matched by the restricted camera movements and murky colours. Fassbinder constantly distances us from the melodrama, by compositions at once comic and mocking - the tears of two women being framed by mannequins etc. In one brilliant scene, Petra talks to Sidonie while looking into her hand mirror so that she appears to be talking to herself, both Sidonie and her 'reflection' interrogating her.

    The women's bodies are undermined not only by unflattering framing, but by the fetishistic, limbless plastic figures surrounding them. Most incongruous of all is the large wall size painting that forms a background to the film, a large classical subject with abandoned child, prone woman and upright man, continually ironising, mocking, undermining the narrative, even provoking it, as characters pose in a similar fashion. There is one crucial difference - the man - the crucial absence from this male-mediated female psychodrama.

    Well, one of two. Another is the speech of Petra's long-suffering servant Marlene, who may, or may not, be the real creative force behind Petra's success, who exists in a Beckett-like relationship with her mistress as the latter, like Hamm in 'Endgame', winds down towards inertia. Like the audience, she is mute, and observing. She is also the one sympathetic character, her isolation and anguish eloquently expressed in some very moving composions as she stands behind screens, unable to say no.
    8shanejamesbordas

    Key Film From The German Master

    Claustrophobic, talky and highly inventive – The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant is a key film in the development of R.W. Fassbinder's art. According to longtime colleague Ulli Lommel, Fassbinder wrote the entire work (which also became a play and, posthumously, a modernist opera) during an 11 hour plane journey from Germany to LA. Excited by this flush of creativity, Fassbinder ordered his entourage to head straight back home and shot the entire film in a extraordinary 10 days.

    Set wholly within one room in the home of successful fashion designer Petra Von Kant, the film deals with the destructive love affair Petra (Margit Carstensen) begins with aspiring model Karin (Hanna Schygulla). As one of Fassbinder's early forays into the reexamination of 1950's Hollywood melodrama, the film has the tendency to polarise audiences with it's highly stylised and almost stagy approach. Even the lack of incidental music may jar with those not familiar with the director's work. Rather than using a swelling score giving cues to the emotions the audience is meant to feel, Fassbinder opts instead for selective natural sound (a typewriter endlessly clacking away in the background during an important scene, for instance) and records from Von Kant's (i.e. Fassbinder's) record collection. Without this trapping, we watch Petra's self-destruction with a certain ambiguity and a more considered response is elicited from the viewer. More space is also given to the magnificent dialogue and inventive camera-work (shot in long, winding takes) which allows the fine ensemble cast to to plunder the depths of emotional despair, all the while dressed in Von Kant's wonderfully outrageous designs.

    This is all the more fascinating when read as a thinly veiled confession of Fassbinder's domineering ways with those in his inner circle. As also pointed out by Lommel, the film's exclusively female characters were actually all based on men. Fassbinder, however, mostly preferred to work with women as he felt they were freer to express extreme states of emotional truth and more open to the requirements of high melodrama. As a primer for the great director's work, The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant is an excellent example of Fassbinder's over-riding theme: how the hunter can quickly become the victim and that the universality of desire and need within all human relationships is a constant, regardless of status, sexuality or age.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Rainer Werner Fassbinder wrote the entire screenplay for the film by hand during a single 12-hour flight from Berlin to Los Angeles.
    • Citazioni

      Petra von Kant: I think people need each other, they're made that way. But they haven't learnt how to live together.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Follows Opening Film Title: "Gewidmet dem, der hier Marlene wurde (Dedicated to the one who became Marlene here)."
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Fassbinder in Hollywood (2002)
    • Colonne sonore
      The Great Pretender
      Written by Buck Ram

      Performed by The Platters

    I più visti

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    Domande frequenti17

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 23 settembre 1982 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Germania occidentale
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Criterion (United States)
      • Official site
    • Lingua
      • Tedesco
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Worpswede, Lower Saxony, Germania
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Filmverlag der Autoren
      • Tango Film
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 325.000 DEM (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 8144 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 11.623 USD
      • 16 feb 2003
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 9992 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 4min(124 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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