Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA murder mystery set in Budapest, 1936. Just as Hungary was preparing to allign itself with Hitler, a young beautiful girl is found dead and no one wants to investigate - except Gordon a cri... Ler tudoA murder mystery set in Budapest, 1936. Just as Hungary was preparing to allign itself with Hitler, a young beautiful girl is found dead and no one wants to investigate - except Gordon a crime reporter who has a gut feeling that things are not what they seem.A murder mystery set in Budapest, 1936. Just as Hungary was preparing to allign itself with Hitler, a young beautiful girl is found dead and no one wants to investigate - except Gordon a crime reporter who has a gut feeling that things are not what they seem.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 3 indicações no total
- Szöllõsy Fanny
- (as Törõcsik Franciska)
Avaliações em destaque
A young woman (Franciska Törocsik) is found dead on a street in the red light district, she has no means of identification apart from a Jewish prayer book. Gordon briefly encountered this woman before and is unwilling to just pass the death off as "just" the murder of a prostitute as the police are keen to do. Joined by his former lover, photographer Krisztina (Reká Tenki) he pursues the case with the determination of a detective rather than just a journalist. Krisztina is all too aware of the rising political tension and Anti-Semitism having just returned from Berlin. As the investigation continues Gordon is warned off by the formerly honest police chief Gellert (Zsolt Anger), he is beaten up by thugs, pistol-whipped by a mobster and Krisztina suffers similar indignities, for this case is bringing them closer to the higher echelons of Hungarian political and business circles.. In a scene reminiscent of Casablanca, Gordon beats up fascists in a bar who object to a "Jewish" song, he is involved in a car chase pursued by communists, yes, this is no ordinary murder. But he goes where the evidence takes him.
The Budapest of 1936 is vividly recreated by director Eva Gardos along with cinematographer Elemer Ragalyi and set designer Pater Sparrow. Tight outdoor shots in present day Budapest avoid the necessity of CGI. Beautiful interiors have been crafted with an elite nightclub providing boxing matches between women over dinner and politicians playing cards upstairs, in a high class brothel women may be chosen from a pictorial menu. This contrasts with street corner card games and bare-knuckle boxing in the streets. Adapted from the eponymous novel by Vilmos Kondor, with the screenplay written by Andras Szeker. 8/10
As always, movies introduce changes from their original books to make the movie more "movie-like", and while I understand that it is difficult to have source material that is hundreds of pages long, something has got to go, I felt that they made some significant changes that lead to a worse movie.
In the books Zsigmond Gordon is quite a nice guy. He treats his girlfriend/wife all in all pretty well. In the movie he is portrayed as a bit of a chauvinist, a womanizer. The madame at the wh**e-house was also portrayed in a very different way, in the book she was sad and lonely. And so on, there are several changes like this.
Several of the locations felt very much like shot in a studio lot, which was also a shame since it would've given much more authenticity to the movie if more was shot in Budapest. But a difficult thing to pull of, logistically. The direction and acting was stiff at times, but all in all, not bad for a Hungarian movie with a limited budget.
In any case, a watchable movie!
The "Noir" atmosphere is well rendered, and the portrait of a city with rising anti-Semitism seems realistic. The almost-final link seems to stretch believability (which is why I didn't score it higher), though the journey itself is enjoyable. I saw this at the Toronto Jewish Film Festival, and so was more sensitive to the Jewish background.
Você sabia?
- Erros de gravaçãoThere is a (beautiful ) Coffee machine, ELEKTRA Micro Casa Semiautomatica which is an espresso machine using pressure (pump) to brew coffee. The movie is set in 1936, but it's only in 1938 that Achille Gaggia started to brew espresso coffee by means of pressure through a piston system (later by mean of a pump)
- Citações
Gordon Zsigmond: Budapest. For some, it's the city of death, for others, it's the city of lights.
Principais escolhas
- How long is Budapest Noir?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Budapest Noir
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- HUF 897.382.877 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 283.704
- Tempo de duração1 hora 35 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1