VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
7450
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un gruppo di giovani cresce sul lato sbagliato (est) della Sonnenallee a Berlino, proprio accanto a uno dei pochi valichi di confine tra Est e Ovest riservati ai cittadini tedeschi.Un gruppo di giovani cresce sul lato sbagliato (est) della Sonnenallee a Berlino, proprio accanto a uno dei pochi valichi di confine tra Est e Ovest riservati ai cittadini tedeschi.Un gruppo di giovani cresce sul lato sbagliato (est) della Sonnenallee a Berlino, proprio accanto a uno dei pochi valichi di confine tra Est e Ovest riservati ai cittadini tedeschi.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 7 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
Minh-Khai Phan-Thi
- Gast aus Vietnam
- (as Minh Khai Phan-Thi)
Sabine Orléans
- Pionierleiterin
- (as Sabine Orleans)
Recensioni in evidenza
When you haven't watched a movie because you thought it would be way too dramatic ... and it turns out it is more a comedy. I finally came around to watch this. German movies can be good and can be bad - which I reckon is true for any other countries movies too. But when you have to decide what to watch, there was a time where I just wasn't ready to experiment with German movies - so that is on me.
Having seen this the other day, I have to admit, the beginning alone with the main character walking on the street, with all the east/west conflict (do not confuse this with East Coast and West Coast rap battle/war) - a subject that Germany likes to explore in movies. And when it is done with such an ease as here ... well everyone is happy.
Having seen this the other day, I have to admit, the beginning alone with the main character walking on the street, with all the east/west conflict (do not confuse this with East Coast and West Coast rap battle/war) - a subject that Germany likes to explore in movies. And when it is done with such an ease as here ... well everyone is happy.
As an American who lived in former East Germany for a time, I was impressed by the way this film portrayed the ambivalence many Ossis felt about the fall of the Wall. The characters were more nuanced and their treatment more sensitive than that seen in the more popular Goodbye Lenin which, while a good movie, is more about the character's relationship with his mother than it is an accurate portrayal of life in East Germany. Goodbye Lenin seems to reduce the Ossi existence to communist commodification -- to be an Ossi is about what kind of pickles you eat -- whereas Sonnenallee allows its characters to be much more than consumers. In interviews with the makers of Goodbye Lenin, they have mentioned that much of their inspiration for their treatment of East Germans came from TV shows on East Germans.... Sonnenallee presents the eastern life without the extra refraction of the television screen.
I am sure that those who have at least their childhood (like me) spent in a pseudo-socialist undemocratic country, would watch Sonnenallee with sense of recognition, with things most of us have probably aimed to forget. On the other hand, when you are young, minor, your perceptions are still different from those of adults, who are in need of living on and supporting their family. First love, new music, friendship, coming of age, hobbies, plans for future are universal. In my opinion, all those aspects are well and realistically (now one can giggle or laugh out these absurd things) depicted in this movie, with convincing performances by an even cast. By the way, the Soviets would have vacated all streets close to their "enemy", odd that it was possible to live so close to the Berlin Wall.
Furtermore, I would disagree with them who think that Sonnenallee is a kind of glorification of the GDR. Really? For nonrenovated houses, constant shortage of even crumbling goods, brainwash by authorities, fear for police and "rats", strict punishments for harmless pranks, limited travel options, etc.? Those who do had apparently a "good" life at the expense of others...
I can hardly guess how films like this would act upon the people unaware of socialist dictatorships. Perhaps they would regard them as unintelligent comedies. But the film in question could be shown more within the former Eastern bloc.
Furtermore, I would disagree with them who think that Sonnenallee is a kind of glorification of the GDR. Really? For nonrenovated houses, constant shortage of even crumbling goods, brainwash by authorities, fear for police and "rats", strict punishments for harmless pranks, limited travel options, etc.? Those who do had apparently a "good" life at the expense of others...
I can hardly guess how films like this would act upon the people unaware of socialist dictatorships. Perhaps they would regard them as unintelligent comedies. But the film in question could be shown more within the former Eastern bloc.
I've seen Sonnenallee in a small European film fest in Ottawa in the fall of 2001. This film is another reason to blame commercially-driven distributors for the lack of variety in our movie theaters. Here is a funny, daring film about life in Communist East Berlin in the 70s that would not have found its way to our screens but thanks to innovative festival programmers. It took courage to even think about making a comedy (with musical overtones, no less !) on such a subject. Yet, thanks to energetic direction, an enthusiastic cast, and some truly memorable ideas (the scene with the multi-table is a real gem, and the take on West Berliners probably well deserved !), Sonnenallee will stay in your minds for a long time. And the joyful finale, complete with East Berliners dancing their way up to the infamous wall, makes you wonder why the film was not also titled : East Side Story.
i laughed the whole way through. the no-name actors gave this film a breath of reality, and after this triumph, i'm sure we'll see much more of them. it would have been easy for this film to bog itself down in the muck of trying to do something really serious with the subject matter and situations, but it remained light and playful and self-mocking. i was actually scared by how much the characters reminded me of my own family! i'm not sure what that says about me, but it makes for some hillarious scenes in the film. everyone should see this comic gem that proves germans have a great sense of humor and can laugh at themselves along with everyone else.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe date this film was released, 7 October 1999, would have been exactly the 50th anniversary of the foundation of the German Democratic Republic.
- BlooperIn the earlier scene Hotte Ehrenreich is watching Der schwarze Kanal (1960). The colorful intro with the German anthem as the theme music, which is shown on TV was in use since 1979. The movie however is set in 1973.
- Versioni alternativeGerman TV version runs ca. 10 minutes longer than the theatrical/home video version.
- ConnessioniFeatures Der schwarze Kanal (1960)
- Colonne sonoreSonnenallee
Performed by Graeme Jefferies
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Dettagli
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- Sun Alley
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- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 12.891.924 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 41 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Sonnenallee (1999) officially released in Canada in English?
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