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IMDbPro

Nel corso del tempo

Titolo originale: Im Lauf der Zeit
  • 1976
  • VM14
  • 2h 55min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,6/10
6887
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Rüdiger Vogler and Hanns Zischler in Nel corso del tempo (1976)
Guarda Trailer [DE]
Riproduci trailer3: 11
1 video
78 foto
Drama

Un meccanico itinerante di apparecchiature di proiezione lavora nella Germania occidentale visitando teatri logori. Incontra un giovane depresso e decidono di viaggiare insieme.Un meccanico itinerante di apparecchiature di proiezione lavora nella Germania occidentale visitando teatri logori. Incontra un giovane depresso e decidono di viaggiare insieme.Un meccanico itinerante di apparecchiature di proiezione lavora nella Germania occidentale visitando teatri logori. Incontra un giovane depresso e decidono di viaggiare insieme.

  • Regia
    • Wim Wenders
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Wim Wenders
  • Star
    • Rüdiger Vogler
    • Hanns Zischler
    • Lisa Kreuzer
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,6/10
    6887
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Wim Wenders
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Wim Wenders
    • Star
      • Rüdiger Vogler
      • Hanns Zischler
      • Lisa Kreuzer
    • 23Recensioni degli utenti
    • 26Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Trailer [DE]
    Trailer 3:11
    Trailer [DE]

    Foto78

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    Interpreti principali11

    Modifica
    Rüdiger Vogler
    Rüdiger Vogler
    • Bruno Winter
    Hanns Zischler
    Hanns Zischler
    • Robert Lander
    Lisa Kreuzer
    Lisa Kreuzer
    • Pauline - Cashier
    Rudolf Schündler
    Rudolf Schündler
    • Robert's Father
    Marquard Bohm
    Marquard Bohm
    • Man Who Lost His Wife
    Hans Dieter Trayer
    • Paul - Garage Owner
    • (as Dieter Traier)
    Franziska Stömmer
    • Cinema Owner
    Patric Kreuzer
    • Little Boy
    • (as Patrick Kreuzer)
    Peter Kaiser
    • Masturbating Projectionist
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Wim Wenders
    Wim Wenders
    • Spectator at Pauline's Theater
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • …
    Michael Wiedemann
    • Teacher
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Wim Wenders
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Wim Wenders
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti23

    7,66.8K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10golem

    A quiet beautiful film. Find a very comfortable seat.

    This is one of my all time favorite films. I love to sit back and just watch it go by. Every scene is worthy of a still photograph and there is little dialog to interfere with this quiet journey. Wenders seems to know what it's like to travel simply to escape ones current reality. The two main characters establish a friendship with few words, and seem to know inherently that too much talk would ruin the moment. It is a long film that moves slowly, so be prepared and get comfortable. It reminded me of the feeling I get on a long roadtrip when its just good to be anywhere but home.
    9Daniel Karlsson

    1:666; everything must change

    A German road movie...if you can call it that, since it plays on a high artistic and intellectual level. Very natural and humane, and above all, beautiful. It's a reflection of life, with substance, a good script and a great sense humor. It might primary be a story about friendship and lost childhood, but it's also about time. Everything must change, nothing can be as it is forever.

    The cinematographer and/or camera man have obviously done a more or less perfect work with every scene in the film. Every frame is built on the golden section. I loved it. The black and white photo are also astonishing beautiful in some scenes.

    An enjoyable trip through Germany, delightful for the mind as well as for the eyes. Not for the mainstream movie-goer though.

    4/5
    7tgooderson

    Often bleak, always beautiful

    Bruno (Rudiger Vogler) is a Cinema projector repair man who travels from town to town along the West and East German border repairing old cinema projectors. One day while shaving by the side of a road, a man drives his car at high speed into a lake, gets out and walks over to Bruno. Bruno, not knowing what else to do laughs at the man and offers him some clean clothes. The man, Robert (Hanns Zischler) hitchhikes with Bruno from town to town beginning a strange and often uneasy friendship.

    The film has several themes which jump out at you and are present throughout. The first is a love of cinema and anger at what has become of the small German cinema. Most of the cinemas that Bruno visits are either badly run, have been turned into porn theatres or are closed altogether. This is director Wim Wenders way of showing viewers what is happening to small cinemas. It is a problem which over thirty years later is still present in my own country. Occasionally Bruno will come across a small, old theatre run by an ex Nazi that is run with care and dedication. A place where old, noisy machines are used by artisan projectionists to show the great classics of the 50s and 60s but generally he deals with people who have no interest in film or it's proper projection. This film is very much a love letter to film.

    A second theme is that of loneliness. Both men are incredibly lonely. Robert's half hearted suicide attempt and constant depression is due to his loneliness after his wife has left him while Bruno spends his life on the road, in an old van, with no time for any love or affection from a woman. For large swathes of the film nothing is said but much is learned through glances and slight comments. It isn't until over an hour in that we discover what the characters names are and it is about two days after travelling together that the two men actually reveal their names. Both are used to silent existences. In one telling scene, Robert confronts his father about never being allowed to speak and we gain insight into why he is so silent.

    The third and final central theme is the Americanisation of Germany. This is a theme of the entire second half of the twentieth century but obviously something that affected West Germany in a large way. When talking about American music Bruno states that "The Yanks have colonized our subconscious". Although filmed and set in the mid 1970s it is still obvious that the Second World War is in the back of everyone's minds. Bruno lost his father to it, the elderly people were party members and the Americans still have a say in the daily lives of Germans who like Bruno and Robert were possibly not even born in 1945. There is a sense that the men and Germany as a whole have been castrated by American 'imperialism' and that is one of the factors in their introverted and non communicative personalities.

    A visual metaphor that Wenders uses is a railway. For much of the film, the men are seen to drive parallel to railways as though to indicate that they are remaining with the status quo and nothing is changing in their lives. In one telling scene, Robert has to cross the line to confront his father and in another he stands very close to it as a train passes, almost as if he is desperate to cross but can't quite manage it. It is as if the line is a barrier between their current selves and what they could be. This is confirmed in the closing scene in which the two men part company.

    Shot in black and white the film has the kind of hyper realism of Martin Scorsese's contemporary films. Wim Wenders goes a step further though and is not afraid to show the audience every part of a person's life. In one early scene Bruno is seen parking his van/home near a beach, walking on to the beach, squatting and defecating. The faeces are actually visible leaving his body. The scene is unexpected and shocking but makes you realise that you are seeing every part of this person's life and that nothing is being left out. In later scenes a cinema projectionist is seen to be masturbating, again showing the entire act and Robert is filmed urinating, once again hiding nothing. This hyper realism was unexpected and is responsible for the film's '18' Certificate in the UK. Was it necessary? No. But it let the audience know that nothing was being hidden from them.

    The plot itself is very slow and nothing much happens for a long time. It is the lack of communication that drives the tension rather than car chases or explosions etc. You almost want to reach into the film and start a conversation. The film also feels older than it is in part due to the black and white but also because the rural Germany in which the protagonists are driving through feels unchanged from before the war. The landscape of the towns reminded me of rural Slovakia, a country which today feels somewhat more 'backward' and less developed than Germany.

    The acting is very realistic and the script also adds to the realism. Wenders' shooting technique is visually arresting but the film is nearly three hours long and feels longer. It's a film that I'm glad I watched and would recommend to hardcore cineaste but a lot of people will find the film boring. I enjoyed it but could have done with an hour less of it.

    www.attheback.blogspot.com
    jandesimpson

    A journey well worth taking

    Wim Wenders's "Kings of the Road" differs from most road movies insofar as it does not quite conform to the conventions of the genre - a setting out, a journey and an arrival. Its two protagonists, Bruno, a cinema equipment maintenance mechanic and Robert, a pediatrician, have already commenced their journeys before the film begins and there is no clearly defined destination at the end. True, their initial encounter marks the beginning of a developing friendship but Wenders does not seem to be particularly interested in where it will take them, rather is it the minutiae of the journey itself that is all important. With a running time of three hours in which very little happens, it would be easy to dismiss the film as self-indulgent. But this would be to miss the point, which is a recreation of the rhythm of everyday life. In the case of Bruno we are aware of every little thing he does. He climbs naked out of his van. Later we watch him shave, and at one point we see him defecating in an open landscape in a middle distance shot held for as long as the act takes. Appropriately there are no such candid camera shots of Robert. He is an altogether more complex and private person. Estranged from his wife, he is clearly on the cusp of suicide when we first meet him. Playing "chicken" by closing his eyes while driving, he ends up in the river. He climbs out of his immobilized vehicle unaided, to be helped on his way by Bruno who is the only witness to the misadventure. The couple barely talk for some time, but a bond of friendship gradually develops between them so that Robert becomes Bruno's companion during his tour of cinemas in small towns on the East/West German border. And that is about all there is to it really. Except that the very feel of the flat landscapes, the river, the open road, level crossings and seedy cinemas takes one over, so that one hardly notices the minutes ticking away. This journey may be of little consequence but Wender's acute eyes and ears for detail make it one well worth taking.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    I can still see you Kamikaze.

    Projection engineer Bruno Winter is pulled up alongside the River Elbe, as he sets about giving himself a shave a Volkswagen drives straight into the river in what seems to be a half hearted suicide attempt. The driver of the Volkswagen is woman troubled Robert, after getting to the river bank he finds Bruno to be a most interesting person, and the pair then set off on a road trip that will shape their respective lives and outlooks considerably.

    Shot in 11 weeks between July 1st and October 31st 1975, Im Lauf der Zeit is now considered to be one of the seminal pictures of New German cinema. Director Wim Wenders and his crew set off along the Zonenrandgebiet with only an itinerary set in concrete, working completely without a script, his lead actors, Rudolf Vogler & Hanns Zischler manage to produce one of the most thought provokingly intelligent road movies to have ever been made.

    There are many musings on this picture across internet forums, and although the film has very deep meanings, I really feel that it's down to the individual viewer to align themselves personally with our protagonists to get the most from the piece. Wenders clearly had deep feelings for German cinema, and here as the guys move from town to town, on Bruno's projection repair route, the feeling that film in this country is dying is quite palpable. This all ties in with the theme of change that is the core essence in Wenders film, it's not just our characters who need to wake up to the need for change, it's essentially his home country as well.

    As the guys move on they meet people, they drink, talk, even fight, and it's all filmed in real time, we are forced to be part of this unlikely friendship, be it washing or shaving, or the act of defecating, it's all humane and sits perfectly as a normal way of life. Come the ending, after nearly three hours of engrossing cinema, we know what has been identified, not just for our two wonderful characters, but for all of us who may be wary of change. The black and white photography from Robby Muller is excellent, and manages to make the various landscapes the guys travel thru an extra character, but ultimately it's just one of a number of things that make Im Lauf der Zeit a truly smart film. My hope is that any newcomers to the film will get as much from it as I did, maybe something different perhaps? But at the very least a recognition that this is a truly wonderful picture. 9/10

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      There had basically been no script for the movie. Except for the first scene after the opening credits when the two protagonists meet each other, everything is improvised or developed on set.
    • Blooper
      The VW beetle driven into the Elbe river is not visible anymore when Robert reaches the waterside. Later after Bruno hands over an espresso to Robert, the beetle is shown as finally sinking.
    • Citazioni

      Robert Lander: What are you writing?

      Little Boy: I'm describing a train station. Everything I see.

      Robert Lander: And what do you see?

      Little Boy: The tracks, the gravel, the timetable, the sky, the clouds. A man with a suitcase. An empty suitcase!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Opening credits provide the aspect ratio and other technical specifications of the film to come.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Im Lauf der Zeit: Outtakes and Deleted Scenes (1976)
    • Colonne sonore
      Just Like Eddie
      Written by Geoff Goddard

      Performed by Heinz Burt (as Heinz)

    I più visti

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    Domande frequenti17

    • How long is Kings of the Road?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 17 febbraio 1979 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Germania occidentale
    • Lingue
      • Tedesco
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Kings of the Road
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Künsche, Lüchow, Lower Saxony, Germania(Robert at the gas station looking for his way)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
      • Wim Wenders Productions
      • Wim Wenders Stiftung
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 680.000 DEM (previsto)
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 284 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 55 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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