AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
2,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Um drama romântico ambientado em 1961 que segue os ambiciosos esforços de um jovem para se reunir com a garota francesa que ama após ter sido separada pela construção do Muro de Berlim.Um drama romântico ambientado em 1961 que segue os ambiciosos esforços de um jovem para se reunir com a garota francesa que ama após ter sido separada pela construção do Muro de Berlim.Um drama romântico ambientado em 1961 que segue os ambiciosos esforços de um jovem para se reunir com a garota francesa que ama após ter sido separada pela construção do Muro de Berlim.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 1 indicação no total
Avaliações em destaque
Beautifully shot and charmingly played, this romantic tale of love doesn't lack a good portion of kitsch to make us feel how important dreams should be in our life.
I have no regrets that I watched this film. He is bright, cheerful and memorable. This is such a rarity in our time, when in a comedy melodrama there is not a single gram of vulgarity. The plot is very curious, and in general the film is made at a fairly high level. But it seemed to me that in the script and direction there are annoying flaws - the characters are outlined very schematically. This affected the game of leading actors. The characters are quite charming, but to create a full-fledged image, the actors did not have the background of their characters, which is why some of their actions look artificially and unconvincing.
Beautiful movie. Not very realistic but I loved it.
The film is shot beautifully, all the actors are engaging and perform well. I laughed and cried. Set in the 1960s it is one of the best romantic films I have seen in a few years. Loved it!
A review in two parts:
Part I (written as watching it)
I knew nothing, absolutely nothing about DEFA studios that operated in Berlin like some kind of mini-Hollywood till August 1961 when the wall began to erect within the city.
The story told in this film is a gem. But the style is so extremely imitative of contemporary TV-movies that, I think they missed out on how to capture an authentic way to move on with the precious material they had.
The opening was extremely confusing as it was hard for me to figure out at what stage of the division they were. "Was that the divided Berlin?" I asked myself, couldn't match the spirit of DEFA with how ANY German would socially act back then. The body language and the soul-shaping cultural and economical backgrounds of actual people could not have produced such environments or relationships. Or could they?
They really managed to confuse me on too many fronts despite the very straight, solid storytelling. So far, it looks like the mismatch of subject matter and preferred style is too extreme.
Currently watching it on Rai1 in Italian and will make up my mind after seeing the second half.
Part II:
Okay, this is the next day and not only did I finish watching it, but also spent a few moments on whether I loved it or just enjoyed the confusion it created. Before saying which way I currently lean, here are a few things about the movie:
* Definitely does borrow a few scenes from Edward Scissorhands. Can't reach the level of that high an emotion between the male and female leads, but yeah, functions properly.
* When I heard "Stand By Me" in a montage scene, I said "That's it, I'm done, now they're using anachorinical music to further blend the style!" but I was wrong. I checked it and saw that the song came out exactly in 1961. Was it the right song for the mood? Maybe not, but the I liked that they pushed me to uncover some trivia.
* Despite the "wannabe" style, the story made so much sense from the lens of history that, for I while I suspected it might have been based on actual events. Tried to figure out if such a Cleopatra production was ever made, or at least the director ever existed - even despite seeing the actors in the photos in the end credits, and not any authentic photos to support any evidence of such a tie to reality. I think the director deserves respect for constructing the story in such a fashion to force that feeling.
* Almost every trick, approach and artistic preference in the film has its ties to glossy Hollywood productions. Overembellished and wannabe on too many fronts. Such that I wonder how more significant and stronger a raw, untidy version of that story could have been. This looks practically shot by Spielberg's apprentice. Yep, that might sound like an insult but that is exactly how I feel about the whole experience.
But wait: I prefer THIS to any Speilberg film from the past decade. Why? Because at least the passion behind this effort is more genuine than the soaked-in-perfection stuff that the film industrialist throws out for masses to consume.
I'd love to watch Tramfabrik a second time instead of The Post or Bridge of Spies. Because just like the "less significant" people it tells the story of, this is more of a leap from with respect to moment they came up with the idea to when they had the film in their hands.
I just wish it was executed more freely, with more "faults" at the expense of breaking a few rules, just like the director in its story has with that earthquake scene.
I suggest you watch this and build your own love-hate relationship with it.
Part I (written as watching it)
I knew nothing, absolutely nothing about DEFA studios that operated in Berlin like some kind of mini-Hollywood till August 1961 when the wall began to erect within the city.
The story told in this film is a gem. But the style is so extremely imitative of contemporary TV-movies that, I think they missed out on how to capture an authentic way to move on with the precious material they had.
The opening was extremely confusing as it was hard for me to figure out at what stage of the division they were. "Was that the divided Berlin?" I asked myself, couldn't match the spirit of DEFA with how ANY German would socially act back then. The body language and the soul-shaping cultural and economical backgrounds of actual people could not have produced such environments or relationships. Or could they?
They really managed to confuse me on too many fronts despite the very straight, solid storytelling. So far, it looks like the mismatch of subject matter and preferred style is too extreme.
Currently watching it on Rai1 in Italian and will make up my mind after seeing the second half.
Part II:
Okay, this is the next day and not only did I finish watching it, but also spent a few moments on whether I loved it or just enjoyed the confusion it created. Before saying which way I currently lean, here are a few things about the movie:
* Definitely does borrow a few scenes from Edward Scissorhands. Can't reach the level of that high an emotion between the male and female leads, but yeah, functions properly.
* When I heard "Stand By Me" in a montage scene, I said "That's it, I'm done, now they're using anachorinical music to further blend the style!" but I was wrong. I checked it and saw that the song came out exactly in 1961. Was it the right song for the mood? Maybe not, but the I liked that they pushed me to uncover some trivia.
* Despite the "wannabe" style, the story made so much sense from the lens of history that, for I while I suspected it might have been based on actual events. Tried to figure out if such a Cleopatra production was ever made, or at least the director ever existed - even despite seeing the actors in the photos in the end credits, and not any authentic photos to support any evidence of such a tie to reality. I think the director deserves respect for constructing the story in such a fashion to force that feeling.
* Almost every trick, approach and artistic preference in the film has its ties to glossy Hollywood productions. Overembellished and wannabe on too many fronts. Such that I wonder how more significant and stronger a raw, untidy version of that story could have been. This looks practically shot by Spielberg's apprentice. Yep, that might sound like an insult but that is exactly how I feel about the whole experience.
But wait: I prefer THIS to any Speilberg film from the past decade. Why? Because at least the passion behind this effort is more genuine than the soaked-in-perfection stuff that the film industrialist throws out for masses to consume.
I'd love to watch Tramfabrik a second time instead of The Post or Bridge of Spies. Because just like the "less significant" people it tells the story of, this is more of a leap from with respect to moment they came up with the idea to when they had the film in their hands.
I just wish it was executed more freely, with more "faults" at the expense of breaking a few rules, just like the director in its story has with that earthquake scene.
I suggest you watch this and build your own love-hate relationship with it.
Você sabia?
- Trilhas sonorasSee You Again
(Theme Song)
Written by Helene Fischer, Joe Walter, Philipp Klemz and Philipp Noll
Produced by Alex Christensen
Performed by Helene Fischer
Courtesy of Polydor
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- How long is Dreamfactory?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Dreamfactory
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 906.193
- Tempo de duração2 horas 5 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1
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