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Lisztomania

  • 1975
  • VM18
  • 1h 43min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
3305
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Lisztomania (1975)
BiografiaCommediaMusicaMusica popMusicaleRock musicale

La vita e soprattutto gli amori del compositore ungherese Franz Liszt, raccontati nei termini di un moderno musicista rock.La vita e soprattutto gli amori del compositore ungherese Franz Liszt, raccontati nei termini di un moderno musicista rock.La vita e soprattutto gli amori del compositore ungherese Franz Liszt, raccontati nei termini di un moderno musicista rock.

  • Regia
    • Ken Russell
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ken Russell
  • Star
    • Roger Daltrey
    • Sara Kestelman
    • Paul Nicholas
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,1/10
    3305
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Ken Russell
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ken Russell
    • Star
      • Roger Daltrey
      • Sara Kestelman
      • Paul Nicholas
    • 45Recensioni degli utenti
    • 50Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:45
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    Foto80

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    Interpreti principali31

    Modifica
    Roger Daltrey
    Roger Daltrey
    • Franz Liszt
    Sara Kestelman
    Sara Kestelman
    • Princess Carolyn
    Paul Nicholas
    Paul Nicholas
    • Richard Wagner
    Ringo Starr
    Ringo Starr
    • The Pope
    Rick Wakeman
    Rick Wakeman
    • Thor
    John Justin
    John Justin
    • Count d'Agoult
    Fiona Lewis
    Fiona Lewis
    • Marie
    Veronica Quilligan
    Veronica Quilligan
    • Cosima
    Nell Campbell
    Nell Campbell
    • Olga Janina
    Andrew Reilly
    • Hans von Bülow
    David English
    • Captain
    Imogen Claire
    • George Sand
    Rikki Howard
    • Countess
    David Corti
    David Corti
    • Daniel
    Anulka Dziubinska
    Anulka Dziubinska
    • Lola Montez
    Lucy Willers
    • Blandine
    Felicity Devonshire
    • Governess
    Murray Melvin
    Murray Melvin
    • Hector Berlioz
    • Regia
      • Ken Russell
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ken Russell
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti45

    6,13.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    5TheLittleSongbird

    A very unique film, but also very difficult to rate

    Ken Russell did have some interesting ideas that came across as entertaining but there were times where his style got ahead of him and the film in question, and Lisztomania epitomises a bit of both. Lisztomania is definitely a polarising film, people will find it wonderfully weird while others will find it tasteless. With me, both seem to be here which is the main reason why the film is not an easy one to rate. If you are looking for a biographical drama, look elsewhere, the first half does have a story to it(more than likely to be fictionalised though) but the second half is like you've having a long really surreal dream and the characters are merely parodies. There are some striking visuals that are colourful and surreal while the music is pulsating and catchy and there is evidence of wit and imaginative touches like the homage to Charlie Chaplin and Hammer films, the fantasy interlude, Liszt's arrival at the castle and the Frankenstein figure(though that may also come under vulgar too because it's Wagner and the Nazis). Fiona Lewis and Veronica Quilligan are good as well. Some of it can feel music-video-like though- much of the second half has very little plot and feels like an excuse to string different vignettes together with a lot of tone shifts- and while the special effects are mostly okay the spaceship is rather fake. Lisztomania does change tone a lot and some of the shifts come without warning and feel very chaotic and there are some touches that are vulgar like the piano torture machine, the giant penis, sex scenes at high speed, Nazi iconography. Not entirely which category the vaginal fantastic voyage comes under, visually it was imaginative but there was a real weirdness as well, the same could be said of the most unique version of the Pope you will ever see. Most of the acting is really not very good, Paul Nicholas is pretty awful, Ringo Starr has a naturalness but doesn't have much to do and Roger Daltry is rather dull. Russell has shown with his Elgar and Delius biographies that he can be restrained and Mahler also(though also with some outrageous images), but Lisztomania is the prime example that I've seen of his filmography where restraint and subtlety go completely out the window, and at times it can feel heavy-handed. Overall, very difficult to rate but is unlike many other films seen before, personally not entirely sure whether I liked or disliked it, most likely to be neither. 5/10 Bethany Cox
    5clanciai

    Grotesque effort at musical character assassination of Liszt and Wagner

    The film suffers from atrocious vulgarization in very bad style and taste throughout, which is a pity, because the idea is not bad at all. Liszt and Wagner are portrayed in gross caricature, which they were already while they were alive and kicking, and just like the 19th century caricatures even these modern ones do not miss their target and actually pinpoint some obvious truths about these the greatest divas among composers in monstrous vanity and atrocious hubris. Liszt was the more sympathetic and actually fell a prey and victim to the ruthlessness of Wagner ending up as a trophy in his graveyard, while the depicting of Wagner as a vampire and prelude to Hitler, his Frankenstein monster, is not altogether maladroit. In certain aspects it actually hits the nail. The unnecessary hooliganism of the film is the corruption of the music, which really is very little Liszt and Wagner but the more Rick Wakeman in horrible disfigurement in pop and rock versions. This is not a music film or any kind of biography or documentation of great composers but rather a twisted parasitic phantasmagoria tearing classical music apart and more or less destroying it. Ringo Starr as a pope with Liverpool accent doesn't make things any better. It isn't even funny but only stupid and disgusting. although a few laughs must out. Still, because of the idea, the imagination, the great camera work and the brilliant fireworks entertainment, I have to give it 5, which is the lowest I ever rated a film here, and I am very doubtful whether I will see any other of Ken Russell's films on music, no matter how much I appreciated his "Valentino".
    8myboigie

    The Birth of Pop Culture

    To many, this film is the stunning-proof that director Ken Russell never had it, and that idiocy and egotism were mistaken for genius. You could say mistaking idiocy and egotism for genius has been the appeal of rock music! Others might say that Russell is simply childish or immature, and that his films are the "masturbatory-fantasies" of an overgrown-adolescent. This belief is unfounded. Is this film over-indulgent? Yes it is, dear readers, very-much-so, because it is art, not entertainment. That-said, if you chuck any expectations, this is a funny film and allegory about the rise of pop-culture in the 19th Century. It draws parallels between Liszt's fame with the other generally-hollow spectacle known as "rock." This is great film-making, and it should be noted that it has similarities between itself and "Rocky Horror," and even "Hedwig and the Angry Inch," as they all examine and explore the relationships between sexuality and pop-culture in similar-areas. It really is true that women threw their underwear at Franz Liszt during his performances, and that he had many-many lovers--groupies.

    Lisztomania is an odd bridge-between "classic" rock and the emergent punk-movement of the time. The film can also be seen as a statement that "rock" is not really subversive or rebellious at-all, but ultimately arch-conservative, and repressive. Amen. It's just a hilarious, wild-romp that will make your guests extremely nervous, which films should do. Movies should challenge people to think and reflect--at-least occasionally. Ironically (or maybe-not!), Mr. Russell had contracted Malcolm MacLaren and Vivienne Westwood to design the S&M-costumes for his film, "Mahler." It should also-be-noted that "Liszt-o-Mania" was released exactly the same year that MacLaren's shop "SEX" opened on King's Row, the rest is as they say, is history. It couldn't be more camp, it has Little Nell in it.

    Basically-put, this is about the the ins-and-outs of "why" we want and need pop-culture, and WHAT we generally-want from our "pop-idols" (sex, of-course). One could easily-say this film criticizes the absurd spectacle that rock had become by 1975, and we get this quite-often in the film. But this theme goes much-deeper, into the relationship-between artist and patron (once, just the aristocracy, now the mob is added). The sexuality is about mass-psychology, too, so Wilhelm Reich gets-his-due, and there is a plethora of Freudian-imagery. It is certainly a very-personal film for Russell, and probably amuses him as much as it does myself that it enrages so-many critics, but it should be noted that some of the absurdity and excess came from the producer of the film, not Mr. Russell. Ken Rusell enrages all the right-people, and that's what some film-making should be.

    God love this lapsed-Catholic, and God love his ways. A flawed part of his canon, but very watchable and educational. As Russell began his career doing documentaries and impressionistic-films on composers for the BBC, it makes-sense that this is considered one of his most heretical-works. He complains about the opening country-song in his autobiography 'Altered States', and there were other aspects of the production he didn't want in the film. It's interesting to note that the 1980s was the period of his purest-work, due mainly to a three-picture-deal with Vestron. The 1970s were actually a very mixed-bag for him, as Lisztomania attests. He isn't entirely-pleased with it, but had some fun with the material, and there it is. I think it's a hoot, which means it isn't on DVD.
    redmund

    Gives the word grotesque a whole new meaning.

    I'm a great fan of Ken Russell's films. What I like most about them is the director's ability (and willingness) to totally immerse his productions into whatever mania happens to be the driving force behind its subject. The results are often excellent, occasionally poor. But never have I seen a film that was, at once, so incredibly visionary and God-awful as Lisztomania.

    In most Russell films, fantasy takes on an important role in the dramatic narrative. In Lisztomania, the narrative is virtually jettisoned in favor of fantasy, and not to altogether admirable effect.

    Still, any motion picture that can give us Richard Wagner portrayed as a Transylvanian vampire who gains musical inspiration by sucking the blood of Franz Liszt deserves points for imaginative hubris.

    Ultimately, Lisztomania is less a film than a comic boot pastiche. Its humor is, by turns, dazzling and lead-footed. Compared to THE MUSIC LOVERS (another Russell bio-pic, this time about Tchaikovsky), Lisztomania is, for all it gleeful, lip-smacking gusto, a rather tired affair, largely because it's metaphors are so pedantic and literal-minded.

    I should point out, however, that Wagner's third-act transformation (or should I say resurrection) into a machine gun-toting, Frankenstein-Hitler rock star (yes, you read correctly) is a genuinely
    6ArtVandelayImporterExporter

    Grand Guignol Oprey

    If you thought Tommy was a trip, wait til you get a load of Lisztomania. Think about hitting the 'shrooms beforehand. Trust me.

    Other reviewers have described various scenes so I won't bother. It's marginally softcore p-rn, marginally softcore horror, and completely over the top. I wouldn't be sitting down the whole family to watch this one.

    I enjoyed Roger Daltrey's gusto in the lead role, Ringo as the Orthodox Pope and Pete Townshend (and Elvis) represented in Orthodox iconography. There also appeared to be a lot of money spent on sets and costumes.

    On one hand it would be easy to be offended by a lot of things in this movie: the desecration of the musical legacies of Liszt and Wagner, the abundant use of phallic symbols, the terrible soundtrack, asking us to believe Daltrey is a piano player, etc.

    On the other hand, if you just surrender yourself to the absurdity of it, it's a bit of wacky fun for 90 minutes. Don't take it too seriously and it won't hurt you.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      First movie to be encoded with a Dolby Stereo optical soundtrack.
    • Blooper
      During the flashback when Liszt is notating the music for Dream of Love; on the second page in the first measure there is the note E-Flat written as an E with the flat symbol next to it. However, since the song is already in the key of A-Flat which includes E-Flat in the scale, it is not necessary to notate the Flat symbol next to the E note. This is only done if the previous E-note was notated as an E-Natural and even then the flat symbol would be placed in parenthesis.
    • Citazioni

      Cosima: I've polished your sword! What do you want it for, to kill the critics?

      Liszt: Time kills critics, my dear.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Music by Rick Wakeman Assisted by Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Hollywood Singing & Dancing: A Musical History - 1970's (2009)
    • Colonne sonore
      Rienzi/ Chopsticks Fantasia
      Composed by Richard Wagner and Franz Liszt

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 29 gennaio 1976 (Paesi Bassi)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Litzomania
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • New Wimbledon Theatre, The Broadway, Wimbledon, Londra, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Theatre interiors)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Goodtimes Enterprises
      • Visual Programme Systems
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 43min(103 min)
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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