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IMDbPro

Europa

  • 1991
  • T
  • 1h 48min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
24.126
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Jean-Marc Barr in Europa (1991)
Trailer 2 for Europa
Riproduci trailer1: 19
2 video
68 foto
CrimineDrammaThrillerThriller politico

Subito dopo la seconda guerra mondiale, un americano accetta un lavoro come ferroviere in Germania. La sua posizione risulta politicamente delicata e diverse persone cercano di approfittarne... Leggi tuttoSubito dopo la seconda guerra mondiale, un americano accetta un lavoro come ferroviere in Germania. La sua posizione risulta politicamente delicata e diverse persone cercano di approfittarne.Subito dopo la seconda guerra mondiale, un americano accetta un lavoro come ferroviere in Germania. La sua posizione risulta politicamente delicata e diverse persone cercano di approfittarne.

  • Regia
    • Lars von Trier
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Lars von Trier
    • Niels Vørsel
  • Star
    • Barbara Sukowa
    • Jean-Marc Barr
    • Udo Kier
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,5/10
    24.126
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Lars von Trier
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Lars von Trier
      • Niels Vørsel
    • Star
      • Barbara Sukowa
      • Jean-Marc Barr
      • Udo Kier
    • 72Recensioni degli utenti
    • 51Recensioni della critica
    • 69Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 17 vittorie e 8 candidature totali

    Video2

    Europa
    Trailer 1:19
    Europa
    Europa
    Trailer 1:18
    Europa
    Europa
    Trailer 1:18
    Europa

    Foto68

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
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    + 61
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    Interpreti principali29

    Modifica
    Barbara Sukowa
    Barbara Sukowa
    • Katharina Hartmann
    Jean-Marc Barr
    Jean-Marc Barr
    • Leopold Kessler
    Udo Kier
    Udo Kier
    • Lawrence Hartmann
    Ernst-Hugo Järegård
    Ernst-Hugo Järegård
    • Uncle Kessler
    Erik Mørk
    • Pater
    Jørgen Reenberg
    • Max Hartmann
    Henning Jensen
    Henning Jensen
    • Siggy
    Eddie Constantine
    Eddie Constantine
    • Colonel Harris
    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • Narrator
    • (voce)
    Benny Poulsen
    • Steleman
    Erno Müller
    • Seifert
    Dietrich Kuhlbrodt
    • Inspector
    Michael Phillip Simpson
    • Robins
    Holger Perfort
    • Mr. Ravenstein
    Anne Werner Thomsen
    • Mrs. Ravenstein
    Hardy Rafn
    • Man in Housecoat
    Cæcilia Holbek Trier
    • Maid
    János Herskó
    János Herskó
    • Jewish Man
    • Regia
      • Lars von Trier
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Lars von Trier
      • Niels Vørsel
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti72

    7,524.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    balaux

    Back to 1945 Germany

    By watching this movie I discovered an artist that I waited too long to discover. Playing with multiple cinematographic tricks Trier not only bring us back in history but he also adopt the style that movie had in the time where the action is depicted. Also, with the rear screen projection, Trier had the chance to give his movie a unique depth of field and by the way to mix color and B&W and therefore make a magical masterpiece that can be appreciated by the dumb movie eaters that most of us are.
    8jzappa

    Abandon Personal Restraint for This Purely Visceral, Sardonic Work of Bizarre Nostalgia.

    Released as Zentropa in North America to avoid confusion with Agniezska Holland's own Holocaust film Europa Europa, this third theatrical feature by a filmmaker who never ceases to surprise, inspire or downright shock is a bizarre, nostalgic, elaborate film about a naive American in Germany shortly following the end of WWII. The American, named Leo, doesn't fully get what he's doing there. He has come to take part in fixing up the country since, in his mind, it's about time Germany was shown some charity. No matter how that sounds, he is not a Nazi sympathizer or so much as especially pro-German, merely mixed up. His uncle, who works on the railroad, gets Leo a job as a helmsman on a sleeping car, and he is increasingly enmeshed in a vortex of 1945 Germany's horrors and enigmas.

    This progression starts when Leo, played rather memorably by the calm yet restless actor Jean-Marc Barr, meets a sultry heiress on the train played by Barbara Sukowa, an actress with gentility on the surface but internal vigor. She seduces him and then takes him home to meet her family, which owns the company which manufactures the trains. These were the precise trains that took Jews to their deaths during the war, but now they run a drab day-to-day timetable, and the woman's Uncle Kessler postures as another one of those good Germans who were just doing their jobs. There is also Udo Kier, the tremendous actor who blew me away in Von Trier's shocking second film Epidemic, though here he is mere scenery.

    Another guest at the house is Eddie Constantine, an actor with a quiet strength, playing a somber American intelligence man. He can confirm that Uncle Kessler was a war criminal, though it is all completely baffling to Leo. Americans have been characterized as gullible rubes out of their element for decades, but little have they been more blithely unconcerned than Leo, who goes back to his job on what gradually looks like his own customized death train.

    The story is told in a purposely uncoordinated manner by the film's Danish director, Lars Von Trier, whose anchor is in the film's breathtaking editing and cinematography. He shoots in black and white and color, he uses double-exposures, optical effects and trick photography, having actors interact with rear-projected footage, he places his characters inside a richly shaded visceral world so that they sometimes feel like insects, caught between glass for our more precise survey.

    This Grand Jury Prize-winning surrealist work is allegorical, but maybe in a distinct tone for every viewer. I interpret it as a film about the last legs of Nazism, symbolized by the train, and the ethical accountability of Americans and others who appeared too late to salvage the martyrs of these trains and the camps where they distributed their condemned shiploads. During the time frame of the movie, and the Nazi state, and such significance to the train, are dead, but like decapitated chickens they persist in jolting through their reflexes.

    The characters, music, dialogue, and plot are deliberately hammy and almost satirically procured from film noir conventions. The most entrancing points in the movie are the entirely cinematographic ones. Two trains halting back and forth, Barr on one and Sukowa on another. An underwater shot of proliferating blood. An uncommonly expressive sequence on what it must be like to drown. And most metaphysically affecting of all, an anesthetic shot of train tracks, as Max von Sydow's voice allures us to hark back to Europe with him, and abandon our personal restraint.
    9UlrikSander

    The culmination of Lars Von Trier's period of perfectionism -- 9/10

    Storyline: Max von Sydow's voice-over narration hypnotizes the protagonist (and audience) back to 1945 where our protagonist the young American ideologist Leopold Kessler (Jean-Marc Barr) has just arrived in post-WWII 1945 Germany to help rebuilding the damaged country. Uncle Kessler (Ernst-Hugo Järegård) supplies Leopold with a job in the big Zentropa train corporation, but soon Leopold falls in love with Katharina Hartmann (Barbara Sukowa); daughter of Zentropa owner Max Hartmann (Jørgen Reenberg). Leopold soon finds himself caught in a web of corruption, being taken advantage of, losing his ideology, and is forced to chose between pest or colera.

    Mysterious, mesmerizing, manipulative, noirish, haunting, beautiful, and ugly. These are some immediate, grandiose, descriptions that come to mind when thinking of Lars von Trier's 1991 masterpiece EUROPA; the final chapter of the Europa trilogy. In USA it was retitled ZENTROPA so audiences wouldn't confuse it with Agnieszka Holland's EUROPA EUROPA from 1990 (equally a WWII drama). The Europa trilogy also consists of FORBRYDELSENS ELEMENT from 1984 and EPIDEMIC from 1987 (the infamous experiment that only sold 900 tickets in the Danish cinemas). The trilogy thematically deals with hypnotism and loss of idealism, although the themes of this trilogy are not as essential as the visuals. In the opening-shot of EUROPA we see a locomotive moving towards us while our unidentified narrator literally hypnotizes us: "On the mental count of ten, you will be in Europa. Be there at ten. I say: ten". A metaphor for movies' ability to transport us into a subconscious dream-reality.

    EUROPA utilizes a strange but extremely effective visual style -- that famous Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky is Trier's main-influence says it all. It's a black-and-white movie occasionally intertwined with red in form of blood, a red dress etc. According to rumors this inspired Steven Spielberg to use the similar effect in SHINDLER'S LIST from 1993 (coincidentially another WWII drama). Furthermore Trier uses so-called Dutch angels and reinvents background-projection by adding separately shot co-operating layers upon layers, but unlike old Hollywood movies that incorporated it for economical reasons, Trier uses it for artistic reasons. These carefully executed strange-looking visual techniques underline that we are in a dream-reality, we are hypnotized; the universe of EUROPA is not real! EUROPA is often criticized for weighing advanced technique (such as multi-layered background-projection) above plot and characters, but hey that's what reviewers criticized Stanley Kubrick's 1968 visual masterpiece 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY for -- nowadays it holds an obligatory place in all cinema-history books.

    EUROPA also gets accused of historical incorrectness. Apparently Trier assigns the Nazis' Werewolf terrorist-group too much historical significance. According to various online-sources that's correct (a fascinating subject - try Googl'ing it yourself!), yet Trier's purposes are neither educational nor portraying history accurately. EUROPA is a never-ending nightmare. Leopold Kessler is hypnotized, therefore the universe that the audience encounters is a distorted reality. Equally it shows how our memory deceives us -- a 100% accurate reconstruction is a lie! Although young audiences who experience EUROPA are too young to have memories from WWII, we have a collective memory of it from various BBC documentaries, so these small inaccuracies actually serve a purpose: they inform us us that we are not in post-WWII Germany 1945, but in Leopolds memory of it.

    All three Europa trilogy chapters portray young ideologists with noble intentions forced into corruption and losing their ideological innocence. The ambiguous endings of FORBRYDELSENS ELEMENT and EUROPA show the ideologists getting forever caught in their hypnotized realities. Before, during and after shooting EUROPA in 1990 in Poland, Lars von Trier and co-writer Niels Vørsel were extremely interested in WWII. It shows. It's packed with extremely beautiful shots catching the atmosphere of the time-period spot-on. A great example is the old Polish church (EUROPA was shot in Poland primarily for economic reasons) in the last act of EUROPA. As with 2001: SPACE ODYSSEY I think EUROPA will receive it's rightfully deserved place in cinema-history. Its method of twisting old film-noir love-affair clichés and visual techniques is so unique, strange and completely different from anything you will see from Hollywood nowadays, or any other dream-factory for that matter.

    EUROPA is an essential movie in the Lars von Trier catalog. Some write it off as pure commercial speculation, but that would be catastrophic. It's right up there with other Trier classics and semi-classics such as FORBRYDELSENS ELEMENT from 1984, the TV-series RIGET from 1993 and DOGVILLE from 2003. It's a unique experience from before Trier cared for his actors, and before the Dogme95 Manifesto. Watch it! "On the count of ten..." 9/10
    7KFL

    Innocents abroad

    Zentropa has much in common with The Third Man, another noir-like film set among the rubble of postwar Europe. Like TTM, there is much inventive camera work. There is an innocent American who gets emotionally involved with a woman he doesn't really understand, and whose naivety is all the more striking in contrast with the natives.

    But I'd have to say that The Third Man has a more well-crafted storyline. Zentropa is a bit disjointed in this respect. Perhaps this is intentional: it is presented as a dream/nightmare, and making it too coherent would spoil the effect.

    This movie is unrelentingly grim--"noir" in more than one sense; one never sees the sun shine. Grim, but intriguing, and frightening.
    10WriterDave

    One of the Greatest Films of All Time

    Someone release this movie on DVD so it can take its hallowed place as one of the greatest films of all time in ten to twenty years when critics and film historians look back on the so-called films of the 1990's and see how vapid they were for the most part, and how Lars Von Trier tried to revolutionize and revitalize the international film world with this masterpiece. As it stands, "Zentropa" (or "Europa" as it is referred to outside the US) is one of the most fascinating and artistic views of the bleakness and almost psychotic uncertainty that oozed out of post WWII Europe, namely the decimated German landscape, whose physical horrors were matched only by the damage to the psyche of its people. Von Trier brilliantly paints his vision on screen. You will feel like you are watching some lost espionage noir classic from the late 1940's with the perfectly lighted black and white scenes, while at the same time feel you are on the brink of something beyond the cutting edge, especially in scenes like the assassination aboard the train. Literally, when you see this movie, you are witnessing the evolution of an art form.

    For some reason, Von Trier got caught up in his own Dogma movement shortly after this. And while his "Breaking the Waves" and "Dancer in the Dark" are classics in their own right, it is with "Zentropa" that he truly lifted the art of film making to new and exciting heights. 10/10, ages like a fine wine, and begs for a DVD release.

    ***Postscript - Criterion released the film on DVD in 2009. Highly recommended.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Upon realizing that Europa did not win the Palme d'Or at the 44th Cannes Film Festival, Lars von Trier gave the judges the finger and stormed out the venue.
    • Blooper
      In the transition before Leopold and Katharina get married, Leopold is initially on Katharina's left side before the altar, but at the end of the transition, he is on her right.
    • Citazioni

      [opening lines]

      Narrator: You will now listen to my voice. My voice will help you and guide you still deeper into Europa. Every time you hear my voice, with every word and every number, you will enter into a still deeper layer - open, relaxed and receptive. I shall now count from one to ten. On the count of ten, you will be in Europa. I say: one. And as you focus your attention entirely on my voice, you will slowly begin to relax. Two - your hands and your fingers are getting warmer and heavier. Three - the warmth is spreading through your arms, to your shoulders and your neck. Four - your feet and your legs get heavier. Five - the warmth is spreading to the whole of your body. On six, I want you to go deeper. I say: six. And the whole of your relaxed body is slowly beginning to sink. Seven - you go deeper and deeper and deeper. Eight - on every breath you take, you go deeper. Nine - you are floating. On the mental count of ten, you will be in Europa. Be there at ten. I say: ten.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in The Making of 'Europa' (1991)
    • Colonne sonore
      Europa Aria
      Written by Lars von Trier

      Performed by Nina Hagen and Philippe Huttenlocher

      Courtesy of Virgin Musique

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 10 ottobre 1991 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Danimarca
      • Svezia
      • Francia
      • Germania
      • Svizzera
    • Sito ufficiale
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Tedesco
      • Francese
      • Latino
      • Greco antico (fino al 1453)
    • Celebre anche come
      • Zentropa
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Nordisk Film Risby Studierne, Albertslund, Sjælland, Danimarca
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Alicéléo
      • Coproduction Office
      • Det Danske Filminstitut
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 28.000.000 DKK (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 1.007.001 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 21.447 USD
      • 25 mag 1992
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 1.026.035 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 48 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby SR
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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